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Page-1~The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 21,

1994~

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Stung
by the spectacle of American sold•ers standing by as Haitian police
beat demonstrators, President Clinton says 1,000 newly arrived military police will help curb the violence. The Pentagon said today the
MPs are on patrol, but cautioned
they can't stop every outbreak.
"Such conduct cannot and will
not be tolerated," Clinton said
Wednesday, referring to the previous day's police attacks on

WASHINGTON (AP)
Teachers are asked to be parent,
social worker, doctor, psychologist
and police officer, "and perhaps, if
there is time, teacher," but the
emphasis in schools must be on
learning, a group of business leaders and educators said today.
The Commiuee for Economic
Development in its report, "Putting
Learning First: Governing and
Managing the Schools for High
Achievement," said governments
- federal, state and local - also
must refrain from micromanaging
the day-to-day operations of
schools.
"Those who set education policy g_g seem serious about calling
fOI' educational excellence, but in
the same breath, they add mission
upon .mission, mandate upon mandate, onto already burdened
schools, the CEO's research and
policy committee said in the report,
released today.
It called the situation "governance gridlock."
American srudents are r:nonning no better than they d1d in the
1970s, even after 10 years of education reform, the organization
said.
''Although most srudents appear
to master low-level skills, few
show capacity for complex reasoning and problem-solving," the
report said.
Education Secretary Richard
Riley agreed that burdensome regulations "have stifled the progress
or education refonns."
"For comprehensive school
refonn to move forward, we have
to give more opportunities to the
schools themselves to carry it out
- and then hold them acco •.mtable
for results," Riley said in a slate-

LOS ANGELES (AP) - OJ .
Simpson's lawyers couldn't have
liked what the judge did, but they
must have loved the way he did iL
Although Superior Court Judge
Lance Ito upheld police searches &lt;;Jf
Simpson's mansion, he laced h1s
ruling with sharp criticism of the
lead detective in the case - stoppin~ just short of calling him a liar.
'I cannot make a finding that
this was merely negligent," Supe-

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U. S. troops to help curb Haitian police brutality
Haitians who had poured into the
streets to welcome the American
occupying force.
As U.S. troop strength in the
volatile Caribbean nation reached
8,500, 1he Clinton admini stration
belatedly received the blessing of
deposed Haitian Presid ent Jean Bertrand Aristidc for the intervention.
And the Senate on a 94-5 vote
approved a non-binding resolution

applauding the accord brokered
Sunday by fonner President Jimmy
Carter, although several senators
took to the noor to blast Clinton's
policy.
At the insistence of Minority
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., the resolution calls for "a prompt and
orderly withdrawal or all United
States anned forces from Haiti as
soon as possible.''
Deputy Defense Secretary John

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Deutch sa id today the military
police ''arc now present in Haill.
They'll be patrolling and their presence should be stabilizing."
Deutch, appearing on ABC, said
"our soldiers arc not told to stand
by 10 watch" beatings, but they are
under orders to intervene only
"when there is sufficient force
backing up the individual ... so we
don't have any injuries to U.S.
troops.''

''We've instructed our soldiers
to behave themselves in such a way

that while they keep the peace, they
don't put them selves in a situation
where Ameri ca n soldi ers have
casualties," Deutch sai ~
In a report to Congress, Clinton
ad dress ed con ce rns about the
length of the mission. "Our presence in Haiti w1ll not be open ended," he said. He said a United
Nations force, which will include

menL
The CED called for an education system in which local school
boards set achievement goals, provide resources and incentives to
achieve the goals and ensure that
they are being met..Statcs, it said,
must establish an "educational
vision" and hold local school districiS accountable for their performance.
"The federal government must
also change its way or doing its
educational business," the report
said, calling for more flexibility in
administering the funds the government allots.
In all three levels of govern ment , the report said, the priority
must be on learning,
Among the problems sc hools
now must deal with are families in
turmoil, violence, drugs, health
issues and poverty.
The report said communities
have a responsibility to provide
services to children in trouble.
"These services may be placed
in the schools, they may be delivered through schools, but they
si'Ould not be made the responsibility of the schools," it said.
The CED endorsed rigorous
national standards and assessments
on academic subjects, a key component of the Clinton administration's Goals 2000 education reform
program. It also called for "incentives - financial, professional or
social- that reward improved studrnt performance.''
But it stopped short of advocating individuill merit pay raises for
teachers, which it said could disn.pt cooperation and collegiality
among the faculty and ~rompt
lelchers to focus on prepanng studm'ts for exams.

RECEPTION HONORS - Fran DeWine,
wife or Lt. Governor Mike DeWine, Republican
candidate ror the U.S. Senate, was honored at a
reception Wednesday night at the Meigs County
C~rthouft'. The reception was hosted by the

--Local brief

Three accidents, including two deer/vehicle collisions, were
investigated Tuesday and Wednesday by deputies of the Meigs
County Sheriff's DeparunenL
The first accident happened Tuesday around 8 p.m. on state
Route 124 just above Forked Run State Park. Frankie Tolliver, 29,
ReedsviUe, was northbound and sbllck and killed a fawn that ran
into the path of her 1982 Buick. Dam~e to the car was listed as
lighL
A Rutland woman's vehicle sustair.ed moderate damage after
striking a stop sign around I p.m. Wednesday. Belinda L. Richmond struck the stop sign with her 1988 Ford while wming from
Barringer S.treet onto Sec:ond StreeL
A Rudaild area man's pickup truck sustained moderate damage
after colliding with a deer Wednesday around 8:10 p.m. Larry
Haynes was northbound and sbllck a deer that ran in front of his
1988 Chevrolet pickup.
No injuries were reported.

Grand jury meeting today
The Meigs County Grand Jury is me~g today 10 consider one

case. Grand jury proceedings are secret end closed 10 the public,

·-

Meigs County Republican Women 's Club. Patty
Pickens, president, is pictured here with Mrs.
DeWine, center, and Commissioner frt'd lloffman, the only local Republican candidalt' in a
contested race. (Photo by Charlene Hodlidti

Parker captures state award

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Margaret Parker, president of
the Meigs County Historical Society and director of the Meigs County Museum, has been selected by
the Ohio Association of Historical
Societies and Museums as the winner of the 1994 Individual
Achievement Award.
Announcement of her selection
for the award made Wednesday by
the Ohio Historical Society, cited
Parker for "her invaluable work as
president of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society, and her
significant contributions to the
community which it serves."
The Achievement Awards Program, initiated in 1982, is an effort
by the Ohio Historical Society to
recognize exceUence in promoting
and interpreting Ohio state and
local history by historical societies,
history museums and individual
historians.
Parker, along with other award
recipients in the nine categories of
recognition - including county
rior Court Judge Lance Ito said and regional history, publication,
Wednesday of the statements ~ade local history publication, promoby Detective Philip Vannatter m a tion publication, newsletter publisearch warrant affidavit. "I have to cation, exhibit or display, public
make a finding that this was at least pro~ram, youth/school program,
reckless. ••
audio-visual program and individuThe ruling was technically a se~­ al achievement - wiU be honored
back for the defense, because 11 at an awards luncheon to be held
means that evidence gathered in the Nov. 5 at the Ohio Historical Censearches - including blood in the ter in Columbus.
Parker started working with the
foyer and _bathroom - may be
museum
nearly 20 years ago and
used at the trial.
has continued through the years as
a volunteer. devoting 30 to 40
hours a week working in and overseeinl! aspects of the museum oper-

Deputies probe three accidents

Americans, will go into Haiti within months and remain !here until
after a new Haitian governm en t
~tkes off office in early 1996.
Btl! Se n. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
a leading critic of Clinton' s Haiti
policy, said today, "the American
pcople want to sec a specific date
when we' ll be ou1 or Haiti."
"It' s easy to l(et in, the hard part
is ge tting out," McCain sa id on
Fox-TV.

Court
approves
caller ID
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Judge upholds police
search of Simpson home

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ation: She is credited with developing a museum library which is recognized as one of the most compre- ·
hensive genealogical research
libraries in this region.
For the past 10 years, Parker has
served as president of the society.
Under her leadership, the museum
has been able to maintain regular
hours for the convenience of local
visitors, as weU as the thousand or
so persons from all over the U.S.
who visit the museum for
genealogical research.
Her interest in the youth of
Meigs County led Parker to th~
Retired Senior Volunteer Program
and its Yesteryear program, which
has offered intergenerational programs to fifth grade st~ents at the
museum over the past nme years.
The students are brought to the

museum, where they arc given
hands-on learning experience in
pioneer crafts and skills. The pro gram, cooperatively sponsored by
the historical society and the Meigs
County Council on Aging, has
earned both state and national
recognition for its role in encouraging heritage appreciation.
Always interested in wriucn
records of Meigs County history,
Parker was a co-researcher with
Michael Gerlach for the publication
A Study of the History of Meigs
C.&gt;unty, which was placed in all
ccunty schools. She also served as
co-chairperson for Meigs Counry
/1 story Vol. I published in 1979,
V31. II published in 1987, and the
Pictorial History of Meigs Counry
published in 1991.
Parker implemented a series of
meetings geared to develop a plan
for preservation, restoration and
development of the Portland area,
including historical sires, old Ponland viUage and the only Civil War
balllefield in the slate of Ohio.
From those meetings, the Portland Historical and Preservation
Commiuee was formed, and is
identifying sites, collecting information and pictures, raising funds
and developing promotional awaren~ss of the area.
At Parker's urging, the society
purchased additional land adjoining
tbe museum property for future
expansion, created a memorial progJ un, and a Civil War marker fund
to commemorate the path taken by
Morgan's Raiders that resulted in
tt. ; Battle of the Buffington Island.
Continued on page 3 . ·

Auditor candidate solicits
civil service employees
CLEVELAND (AP) - Five
civil service employees of state
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson wen:
asked to donate 10 a fund-raiser for
the Democrat running for the·
office, despite his stance against
such solicitation, a newspaper
reported today.
"The thing is, we're tired of
having someonc's hand in our
pocket all the time. We'd like to
see the sySiem changed," said one
of the, workers, who ~equested
anonymity from The Plain Dealer.
The employee said the five civil
service workers invited to a $15per-person event in Marietta for
Randall W. Sweeney. .

State law forbids solicitation of
Rubino showed copies of invitacivil service emplorees for political tions 10 other upcommg fund-rrus donations. Unclassified employees, ers that include the disclaimer.
who are political appointees with"We are keeping to our
out civil service protection, may be promise," he said.
asked for contributions.
Sweeney's opponent, RepubliSweeney has said he does not can Cuyahoga County Commisknowingly solicit civil service sioner James M. Petro, said he did
employees for donations and any not believe the Democrat would
who have been asked for money stop asking auditor's employees for
received the solicitation by mis- campaign contributions.
take.
"It's a continuing pattern of the
Invitations to the Marietta event Ferguson-Sweeney machine, raisWednesday night were printed ing the bulk of its funds from
before Sweeney began including a employees, whether they are classidisclaimer concerning civil service fied or unclassified," he said .
employees, campaign aide Thomas "They're not going to stop."
Rubino said.

,,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) There is no hang -up in the Ohio
Supreme Court over Caller ID.
Justices 'On Wednesday OK'd
that calling service and others,
des pite claims that they threaten
privacy rights.
The court upheld 6-1 the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio's
approval of Ameritcch's advanced
custom calling services that include
Caller ID, a device that lets subscribers know the phone number of
people who call them.
In other action Wednesday, the
court:
- Rifled thai work ers who
al lege sex discrimination have six
years to take legal action against
their employers under state civil
rights laws. The ruling came in the
C:l'iC of a woman who said she was
fired because of her pregnancy.
- Upheld th e conviction and
death sentence in Clcnnont County
of Michael Webb for the 1990
burning death of hi s 3-ycar-&lt;lld son,
Michael. Webb was also convicted
of four counts of attempted aggravated murder. "Webb tried to
destroy by arson live human lives
- the lives of those who loved him
most, as the record shows, and
whom he should have loved most.."
s~id Justice Alice Robie Resnick.
The decision about Caller ID
came in a case in which the Ohio
Domestic Violence Network challenged PUCO approval of
Amcritech's services as a violation
or privacy rights the constitution
guarantees.
Justices, in an unsigned opinion,
found no infringement. They said
the U.S. Supreme Court previous! y
ruled that individuals have no reasonable expectation or privacy in a
telephone number.
The court also said that free percall blocking the PUCO required
the company to offer to all subscribers would safeguard against
disclosure.
Justices acknowledged that
callers might suffer embarrassment
or even physical harm if it was
learned they made a particular
phone calL
"On the other hand, the call
recipients have a legitimate interest
in avoiding obscene, threatening
and harassing telephone calls,
which thL ,, services are promoted
as preventing or deterring," the
court said.
Jus1ice Paul Pfeifer dissented
from part or the opinion that dealt
with automatic callback, anOiher of
the adv.mced custom calling services.
Automatic callback allows a
recipient to return calls to a calling
party if it is done before other calls
are received. He said abusers could
use the system to track down their
victims.
"The minimal level of utility
derived from the offering of an
a1-tomatic callback service hardly
justifies the haunting that abusers
can direct to their victims thanks to
this service," Pfeifer wrote.
David Kandel, Ameritecl! ··
spokesman, said the company was
working on a way to solve the
potential problem Pfeifer menIJ,,ned.
"There has been no case documented that we are aware of in the
country of such an occunence happening. Quite frankly, these servi.:es give victims of domestic violence much more control and security than they have ever had
before," Kandel said.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controll&lt;r

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. Illey should be less than 300
words long . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed With name,
address and telephone nwnbcr. No unsigned letters will be publis hed. Le tters

shou ld be m good taste , addressing issues, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Pres,o;
.
.
.
Excerpts of Ohio editorials of statcw1de and nat1onal mtcrest
The Columbus Dispatch, Sept. 19
..
Americans justifiably feel jaded about the abt hty of gove",lment to
tackle problems, but President Clinton 's recently launched AmenCorps, a
new national-service program for youths, 1s worth aIry.
. ,
.
The idea that the MTV generation might help tackle the nauon s soctal
problems in exchange for educational .grants has been debated fory~.
Volunteer participants will rece1vc $7,500 a year for the if hvmg
expenses and an educational award of $4,725 a year for a maxtmum of
two y= to help finance their college educatton or vocauonal trammg or
pay back their college loans.
.
.
.
To talk to Eli J. Segal, the ch1cf e :ecutlve of the Co rporation for
National Service, !he new quasi-public ~gency in charge of AmenCorps,
is to understand how much Clinton cares about rckmdhng the tdeahsm the
creation of the Peace Corps generated in 1961.
Those days are gone.
.
.
Still, it's a worthy goal to instill m a cymcal, young generauon an
appreciation for communi[}' ser:vtce, whtlc at the same ltme helpmg them
with the soanng costs of education.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Sept. 18
..
.
It is increasingly clear that the wrell;hcd condtuons of the mentally tll
in Ohio prisons have been fairly well documented for some ume.Paul W.
Goldberg, director of the Ohio Civil Service Employees Assocmuon, says
studies detailing the treatment of alleged abuse of mentally 111 mmatcs
have been around since 1989.
If so, why is Gov. George Voinovich just learning of the nature of !he
abuse? Some explanations are clearly in order. .
.
The report, which was researched and wntten by a court-appomted
taSk force, documents frequent physical and mental abuse of the mentally
ill.
.
.
h 'cal
Investigators found numerous allcgauons !hat pnsoncrs were p yst ty assaulted in response to psychotic outburst. Some female mmates complained of being sexually assaui!Cd whll., bemg restramed by guar.ds. The
reports contain allegations that hundred" of severely mentally til mmatcs
were heavily dosed with powerful psyc'totroptc drugs and abandoned m
isolation cells.
.. .
Reginald Wilkinson , director of the .Xparunent of Rehabilttatton and
Correction, must immediately 1denufy corrections officers mvolved m
physical abuses and fire them . Wtlkmson must also see that his employees
are better trained to deal with mentally tl• mmates.

How many times have you
heard it said that baseball is just
another business? Several hundred,
you say? Thank you.
A show of hands, please: How
many of you agree?
Qui te a few. 1 see. 1 would ask
for some demographic information,
but 1 don't have to. I know your
kind . You arc the aging yuppies
and boomer generation corporate
officers
or
consulta nts/brokers/advisers who
fill the lower box seats at the new
parks around the country or sip
chardonnay and nibble brut m the
club level lounges. With baseball
on strike, yo u arc now watching
indoor soccer.
You arc baseball clients.
Another show of hands: How
man y of you dlisagree that baseball
is just another business? Many, I
see. I know yo u folks. too . You
believe there is somelhing special
about the game, that it possesses a
soul. You believe it is somehow

linked with the nation's past and
with your own childhood.
You love reading baseball history. You buy videos of grainy film

Joseph Spear
and photos depicting Merkle's
boner, Bobby Thomson's shot
heard round the world and other
highlights of the century. You own
a copy of "Field of Dreams" and
watch it regularly. You wouldn't
dream of missing an episode of
Ken Bums' "Baseball."
You are baseball fan s, and I am
one of you.
I hope it doesn't bolher you to
hear this, but we are the fools here.
you and I. Not in the sense that we
let ourselves be duped by others
but because we bamboozle ourselves. We know that baseball is a
big business. We know the teams
are owned by very wealthy people,

Letter to the editor
Visit infirmary residents
The Ladies Missionary Fellowship group of Victory Baptist
Church vistted the mfmnary restdents this week.
I just want to say how very good
lhese 16 residents are treated. They
have a clean environment and people who really care about them personally to take care of them .
The residents enjoyed our pro-

gram immensely and JOined us in
singing hymns. We had refreshments with them after !he program.
A special thank s to the infirmary for allowing us this visit. A
thanks is in order for the great job
they arc doing here in Meigs County.
Ladies Missionary Fellowship
President, Betty Barlcer.

Saddened by stern wheel sinking
Dear Editor,
I am sure many people share my
sadness at the sinking of the beautiful stcrnwhecler Jean Mary. Not
only am I sad, I am angry that it
could have happened at all.
According to local news, the
precise location of !he underwater
obstruction was known to local
boaters and officials in the rivertown of Pomeroy.
To a community that has very
little left to auract visitors and their

Tho~ht

money, except access to the Ohio
River, it is mcredulous that this
hazard was never removed. At the
very least it could have been permanently buoyed to protect boaters
and other water enthusiasts from
loss or injury.
Unfonunately, the adverse publicity from this mcident may be too
much for your nedgling "Sternwheel Regatta" to overcome.
H. Clllig
Charleston, W.Va

for Today: "The vfly idea that !here is another idea is something gamed." - Rtchard Jeffenes, Engltsh author ( 1848-1887).

e.ight of ;,hom were on ihe 1993
list of Forbes 400 nchest Amencans.
We know !hat many of the players themselves arc fatcats who t:ravel with briefcases and cellular tetephones, so as not to lose touch with
their brokers. These tobacco-chewing, seed-spitting, crotch-grabbing
jocks are compensated to the tune
of $1.2 million a year, on average,
for !heir ability to throw baseballs
or to hit them with sticks. Except
for these talents, many of them
would be pumping gas or opemting
forklifts in local lumberyards for
$30,000 a year.
Still, we romantic fools cannot
accept this notion of baseball as
business. Our heads say yes, but
our hearts scream no. The national
pastime istheequivalentofa fertil tzer plant? The same lhing as a pig
farm? One of those Frank Perdue
facilities where they rip entrails
from chickens?
Until now, we just haven ' t been

MR.PRESIDENT,
Till: 6:XJDN~V61S
YOUR NEW HEAT IN(;
SY£TEM IS NOW

9S% EFFICIENT.
TllE BADNEI\5 IS
Y(}IRSECURITY ~EM
IS qs% EFFIC leNT,

TOO.

-

Accu-Wcalher" forecast for daytime conclitions and high temperatures
MICH .

IToledo 174• I

IMansfield !12• I•

•

Sarah Overstreet
Wow, what a big difference one little operation can make, I thought.
I'd always thought of her as plain
but attractive 30 years ago, because
of her delicious giggle, engaging
personality and bright brown eyes.
But now, she was clearly a knockout
A few weeks later I had the
opportunity to talk wilh her again,
and she told me she'd just gone to
her 25th high-school class reunion.
I asked if she'd enjoyed herself.
"Yes, I did, but not for any of
the reasons I thought I would," she
told me. "I healed a 25-year-old
wound !hat caused me to have three
nose jobs and a chin implant over
the years, and ended up feeling better about myself than I thought possible." I listened as an amazing
story unfolded.
"When I was a junior and
seni.or in high school there was a
boy who used to tease me about my

lociks and call me things like 'Oiive
Oyl' and 'banana nose,"' she said.
"My self-esteem had already been
pretty low when I went to live with
my foster pareniS, but his constant
ridicule sent it into the cellar. I
resolved that as soon as I could do
something about my looks, I
would. While I was in !he military I
had two bad nose jobs, but I kept at
it until they got it right.
"When I got the invitation to
my hil!h-school reunion, I decided I
that if that boy was there, I was
going to go up to him and ask him
if he had any idea how much pain
he had caused me. I thought that
might help me purge some of the
ba.d feelings, might bring some
ki 1d of closure. But when I got
th :re and saw him standing over by
th~ wall with his own huge schnoz
- something I'd never even
noticed in high school, by !he way
-·and his fat, dumpy wife, everything I was feeling just sort of
m~lted away. I felt free for the ftrst
ti.Je in a quarter of a century.''
I was no stranger to the kind of
suffering Rita was talking about,
and hung on her every won! in fascination. In my early teens I was
one of the girls who didn't look

leo

South-Central Ohio
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low 55
to 60. Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph
becoming southeast.
Friday... Partly sunny. High in
the upper 70s.

Extended rurecasl
Saturday and Sunday ... A chance
of showers or lhunderstonns. Lows
SO to 55 and highs 70 to 75.
Monday ... A chance of showers.
Lows around 50 and highs in the
middle to upper 60s.

The record high tempemture for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 95 degrees in 1895. The
record low was 37 in 1974.
Sunrise !his morning was at 7:29
a.m. Sunset will be at 7:20p.m.
Aroond the nation
Clouds enveloped much of the
East Coast this morning from Florida to Maine. while autumnal temperatures grippe!! Western states.
Thunderstorms loaded with
snow and ice drifted into !he central Plains, where highs in the 50s

By Tbe Associated Press
Partly cloudy skies arc expected
statewide tonight while partly
sunny skies will be the rule on Friday . Lows tonight will be in the
lower to middle 50s across Ohio.
Temperatures will climb into the
middle to upper 70s on Friday.
If you are looking ahead to the
weekend, it looks like there will be
a chance for showers or thunderstorms on both Saturday and Sunday in association with a cold front
now over the Central Plains.

and 60s were expected. Showers
and hail were possible in Nebraska
Kansas, Missouri and Iowa.
'
R.ain was forecast along the
leadling edge of cool air sweeping
from the Great Lakes toward the
Gulf states, with severe storms possible from Wisconsin into Illinois,
Missouri, Arkansas and Louisiana
Highs in the 80s were forecast
in the Southeast, while temperature
were likely to reach the 70s across
the Great Lakes region.

EMS logs 4 calls

Parker. .. eontlnued trom page 1
Her management of funds has
e1.abled the society to purchase a
computer system and state of the
an copier.
She is edi tor of rh ~ society 's
quarterl y newsletter The Meigs
County 1/istorian, chaired the Battl e of Buffington Island Celebration, and is serving as the chairman
of the I 75th anniversary of Meigs
County Comminee.
Parker currently serves as secretary of the Ohio Association of
H.storical Societies, and prior to
b&lt;.-ing named to that position, was
the Region 8 representative to the
board.
It is with the total support of her
f. nily that Parker gives the hours
and hours of volunteer work to !he
Htstorical Society and at the museu• t. In fact, all members of her
family are interested in history and
actively involved in its preservation.

Harold Russell
Harold C. Russell, 73, Pomeroy,
died Tuesday, Sept 20, 1994, at his
residence.
A retired laborer, he was born
April 23, 1921, in Meigs County,
son of the late Alpha and Esta
Arnold Russell. A World War II
veteran of the U.S . Marine Corps,
he was a member of the Harrisonville Masonic Lodge.
He is survived by four sons and
daughters-in-law, Terry G. and Kay
Russell of Orient; Lewis C. and
Betty Russell of New Town;
Roland E. Russell of Spartinsburg,
S.C., and Raymond A. Russell of
Kentucky; three grandchildren and
two great-grandchildren; three sisters, Effie Dollie Hayden of Hockley, Texas; Rachel Young of Flint,
Mich., and Marcia Mullinix of
Fairfield.
He was preceded in death by a
brother, Kennelh Russell and two
sisters, Mary Russell and Alma
Coleman.
Services will be held Friday at
10:30 a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with the Rev. Glen
McClung officiating. Burial will
follow in Bradford Cemetery. No
calling hours will be observed

Patricia J. Splete
Patricia J. Splete, 54, Bethel
Church Road, Btdwell, died Monday, Sept. 19, 1994 at her residence.
Born Sept. 17, 1940 in Warren,
Ohio, daughter of Mary Jones of
Vero Beach, Fla. , and the late
Joseph Perica, she was a sevenlh
and eighth grade mathematics
teacher at Gallia Academy High
School.
She served as the Alpha Mu
Beta sorority adviser and was a
U.S. Air Force veteran. She
received her bachelor's degree in
elementary education from the University of Rio Grande in 1979 and
her master's degree in guidance
counseling from the University of
Dayton in 1988_
She was a member of Grace
United Methodist Church, Fleurs,
the National Education Association the Ohio Education Associatio~ the Gallipolis Education
Ass~ciation, and the National
Council of Math Teachers.
Surviving in addition to her
mother are her husband, James
Gordon Splete, whom she married
Nov. 27, 1987; a son and daughterin -law, R. Richard and Leann~

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ltl-HI)
PUblilhed nery altcroooa, Monday throt.lah
Friday, Ill Cour1 St., Pomaoy, Olilo, by tile
0111o Valley Pllbllahlaa Co~q~~~~y1Mui1Jmedia
lzae. , Pomeroy, Oblo 4S760. Ph. 992-2.1S6.
s-d ,,_ ........ pold" Po..,.y, Otuo.

~-· The Mlod''"" Plw, ud lhe atJo

~~--

..

POS'I'MA'I'II• S.H IICidreN correcUou to

Tbe Daily SeaUael, 111 Court St.,

Fomeroy,Ohlo 45769.

"
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·
:.
.
·
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•

SUIScatPI'ION RATES
11 c..n. • Mot« RoW:e

E2:::: : : :::::::::: : ::::::: : : :::~:::::~:~
IIIIIGLI COPY PRICE
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nail .. - - to'lbo Otltlpotll Dolly
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No ..btcriptio• by mall pennitla:t 1.1

•eu

Martin of Gallipolis; a daughter,
Lesley Che Manin of Long Beach,
Calif.; three sisters, Jo Trippie of
Marion, N.C., Jennifer Manson of
Plantation, Fla, and Susan R. Jones
of Homestead, Fla.; and a brotherin-law, Sam Trippie of Chicago, Ill.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday
in the Grace United Methodist
Church, with Pastor Roben Foster
and the Rev. David Hogg officiating. Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemetery. The family will receive
friends at !he church on Saturday
from II a.m. until the time of the
service.
Arrangements are by the
McCoy -Moore Funeral Home
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis.
In lieu of nowers, donations
may be made to the Holzer Hospice
of Gallia County, in care of Sue
Bowers, Holzer Medical Center,
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.

In addition to raising five sons
and two daughters, Parker has
devoted hours of her time to community service, touching the lives
of both young and old.
She has served as a Girl Scout
leader and a 4-H advisor, and has
been active in the Meigs Cou nty
GP.nealogical Society, the Wincling
T--ail Garden Club, and the Retired
S&lt;nior Volunteer Program, serving
or the advisory council, as well as
h1 r church, St. John Lutheran at
p,neGrove.
She was recogni zed by the
~odern Woodmen of America
11 ICC , receiving Community Scrvi ;e Awards from both the Alfred
C •mp and !he Burlingham Camp.
Holzer Medical Center
Sept. 21 discharges
Vaneetha Christopher, Margie
Caplinger, Mrs. Earl Dulaney and
son, and Evelyn Smallwood.

Lowell Halley
Lowell F. Halley, 61, 534
McCully Road, Gallipolis, died
Thursday, Sept. 22, 1994 at his residence. A U.S. All' Force veteran of
the Korean Conflict, he was a
retired beltman from Southern
Ohio Coal Company, Meigs Mine
#2.
Born Dec. 8, 1932 in Mercerville, he was lhe son of the late
James and Emma Thornton Halley.
Survivors include his wife, Virginia Fry Halley; four sons,
Howard Halley of Thurman; Yancy
Halley, Sr., of Oak Hill, Paul Halley of Gallipolis and Karl Halley of
Crown City; one brother, James
Halley of Gallipolis, and six grandchildren.
He was preceded in dealh by his
parents; one son, Harold Halley;
one sister, Daisy Halley, and two
brothers, Leo and Thomas Halley.
Friends may call6 to 9 p.m. Saturday at the Willis Funeral Home.
Services will be held 2 p.m. Sunday with dte Rev. Lloyd Fry officiating. Burial will be in Ridgelawn
Cemetery where Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4464 will make a
flag presentation.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions Harry Stobart, Racine; Margaret
Dutton, Middleport
Wednesday discharges - none

George, Syracuse, $25 plus costs
for no operator's license; Lori P.
Shane, Gallipolis, $25 plus costs
for running a red light; David
Hardwick, Middleport, $100 plus
costs for disorderly conduct; and
Jerry Armstrong, Middleport, $100
plus costs for disorderly conduct.
Forfeited were:
James C. Smith, Pomeroy, $60
for running a red light; Mark A.
McCloud, Middleport, $150 for
open container; Terry L. Wolfe,
Middlepon. $60 for failure to yield
right of way; and Peggy S.
Caruthers, Racine, $60 for failure
to maintain assured clear dlistance.

Star Grange hosts barbecue
The Star Grange 778 will host
an all-you-can-eat chicken barbecue at the grange hall on county
Road I , north of Salem Center. The
event will be from II a.m.-2 p.m.
Saturday with a local clogging
group entenaining.

SAVE STEPS!

Garden club to meet
Rutland Garden Club, regular
meeting, Monday, home of Stella
Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Riverview Club to meet
The Riverview Garden Club
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Betty Boggs.

Shop the

Ads'

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Akro ....................................... .58 718
Ashland OU ........................... .35 318
AT&amp;T ................... _,..._......... .54 318
Bank One ...........,_,.._, .......... .31 718
Bob Evans ...... ,_.,•...............lO S/8
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Charming Sbop ..................... .8 S/16
City Holdlng .....-...........................31
Federal Mogul ........................23 1/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ,,_,,,............ .33 518
K-mart .................................. .l7 112
Lands End ............................. 20 1/4
Limited Inc ............................. l9 112
Multimedia Inc ..................... .30 112
Point Bancorp .... - ....................... 19
Reliance Electric .......................... 25
Robbins &amp; Myen ................... l9 112
Shoney's lnc .......................... .t3 3/4
Star Bank ...................................... 42
Wendy lnt'l. ................................. tS
Worthington lnd .................... 20 718
Stock reporl&lt; are the 10'30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest of
Gallipolis.

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
JACK NICHOLSON
IN

Meigs announcements
Hunter Sarety Course slated
An Ohio Hunter Safety Course
will be held starting Monday at the
Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Classes will be from 6-9
p.m. Monday , Wednesday and
Thursday with a test Saturday
morning. Course is free but class
size is limited. Call 992-6311 to
register.

Clarification

Stocks

Hospital news

The following cases were heard
in the Middlepon Mayor's Coun of
Dewey Horton.
Fined were:
Shannon Scholderer, Middleport, $200 plus costs for criminal
mischief and sentenced to 30 days
in jail, $100 for consuming alcohol
under age of 21, $100 for possession of alcohol; Timothy W. Gibbs,
Hartford, W.Va .. $465 plus costs
for driving under the influence and
sentenced to three days in jail; Ida
M. Park, Pomeroy, $10 plus costs
for expired tags; Kathy Ginther,
Middleport, $100 plus costs for
open container; Margaret D.

Yet more rain was spreadi ng
north along the Atlantic seaboard
and into New York state, wtth
winds expected forecast 10 gust up
to 30 mph in Virginia and
Delaware. Highs in the 60s were
forecast
Clouds streami ng north were
likely to reach into New England.
where highs mostly in the 70s were
forecast
The nation's hot spot Wednesday was Redding, Calif., with an
afternoon high of 104.

Units of the Meigs Cou nty
Emergency Medical Servic e
recorded four calls for assistance
The $430 ,000 used by the
Wed ne sday . Units respond ing Southern Local School Distnct for
energy conservation, borrowed
included:
MIDDLEPORT
lhrough the state House Bill 264
6:16p.m., North Fourth Street. progrdm, will be paid back over a
Kenneth Mohler, Veterans Memo- I 0-year period through money
saved by use of the cos t-cutting,
rial Hospital.
energy efficient heating units purSYRACUSE
4:35 a.m ., state Route 338, chased through the program. The
Linda Turley, Camden-Clark $430,000 is not an added expense
to the district. The information
Memorial Hospital;
I :27 p.m., state Route 124, Ron should have been in a story publtshed Wednesday about the disSearls. Holzer Medical Center;
8:12 p.m., Carmen Road, Edna tnct's renovations.
Carmen, refused treatment

--Area deaths-- Middleport Court news

ac"e

WOLF R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
JOHN CANDY
IN

WAGONS EAST

first!

7; 1 ~,9; 1 5

......

ADIISSJON 52.00
446-0023

t..w. G. . . Coul7
S2tl4
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52 Weell ....................... - ........................$1•.76
· -0oo1oWo Gollo C..IJ

~=:::::::::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :::m~

........

THE NEHT KARATE KID
..,
.., .........,
NRTURRL BOIN KillERS
II) . .. . . . .

..,

_ .. . . . . ,...,.

7:00 9:10 I:#JLY MT.SM'/1111.1:00 J:)O U

FORREST &amp;UMP
7:00,9:)0 OIULY MT. SNI'/!Dt. I;OO, J:JO I PGll J

IN THE ARMY NOW
1:10,9:20 DULl Mild' .81(1/fUA. 1: 10 ,lt 20 1""1

Till liTH! IRSCALS
7:20,9: 10 DUL't _,.,SIIT/!I.M . 1:l0 1:10 H'CJ

PG-ts

ONE EVENNG SHOW 7:30

TIMHOP
DIULT ..a' .SIIr/IIUI . l : t),J:a 1111

7; 10,9 :10 IJMLT rlflfr.SKr/a.t. l : 10, J:lO j)I(;J

THE MASK
:20, t:JO DAILY MJ . SJd'/!11'1 . 1 :20, l:JO IP(;IJI
&lt;DIMO SUI I Al.WT EIID5 in "nni': .!UVr"
' fiB:YL SD!II' 1n "'ne RI'ml: Wild'
I

to a

•

on the house!

Trash haulers to meet
The Meigs County Trash
Haulers Association will meet
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Manley's
Recycling Building on Mill Street,
Middleport. All county trash
haulers urged to attend.
Reunion to be held
The Warner Reunion will be
held Sunday at Lake Snowden.
lunch, 12:30 p.m.
RACOtomeet
The Racine Area Community
Organization will meet Tuesday at
Star Mill Park, 6:30 p.m. New
members welcome.
Tent Revival to be held
A tent revival will be held at the
Ash Street Free Will Baptist
Church in Middlepon beginning
Monday. Clovis Van Over will be
the speaker. Services begin at 7:30
p.m.

Bank One Basic Home Buying Seminar
Come get the good word on everything that goes into buying a home- at
our Basic Home Buying Seminar.
• Learn how to apply for a loan and what it takes to get it approved.

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Tuesday, September 27, 1994
6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
at
Meigs County Public Library
216 West Main Street, Pomeroy

M.ULStJISCIJP110NS

•
•

01994 Accu-Weathsr, Inc.

------Weather------

lhing accomplished by Clinton and
the Democratic 103rd Con~ess.
But "Victory Over Violence"
should give pause to anyone tempt-

rt

Sl.nny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

Via Associat9d Press GraphicsNst

quite right io a group of teen-age
boys and was extremely unhappy
about my looks, especially my
frizzy hair in an era when "good"
hair was long and straight. I was
dying to know what she fmally said
to him.
"Well, I just went up, looked
him squarely in the eye and said,
Tello, Jim,' and nothing else,"
sl.e said. "I already had what I'd
come for: I'm OK whether I had a
nose job or not. But the damedest
lhing happened later. I was standing at the bar and he walked up and
said, 'Rita, I want to buy you a
drink.' I said, 'Jim, you don't have
tc do !hat,' and he said, 'Yes, I do.
I r•eed to buy you a drink,' and I let
him."
Ah, Rita was a class act, just as I
remembered. In the same instant
th'at Jim realized the gravity of
what he'd done 25 years ago, she
allowed him to redeem himself.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndi·
cated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.
(For lnrormation on bow to
communicate electronically with
t~is columnist and others, conIll '' America Online by calling 1·
8t 0-327-6364, exl8317.)

tutoring:counseling, activities, and
- Also in the crime bill is more
a safe haven for kids who might m:mey for programs to ftght rape
otherwise be on the streets. An and domestic violence- p~s
official of the program says, such as the Queens, N.Y., dtstrict
"What's unique about this program attorney's special office, on call 24
v
d~
·
Lis .. . that you don't have to be hours a day, to prosecute accused
M0 On nOn
at'dicted (or) pregnant to get ser- rapists and the Cohasset, Mass.,
vi= here. You can just walk in off program providing mandatory
ed to attack preventiov Jl{Ograms, the street."
arrest and 24-hour courts for
and should embolden th~e,_~
o
- In Columbia, S.C., police spousal abuse.
suppon them.
,~
tlicers can get no-money-down, 4
- The series features tough
Produced by Arnold Shapiro
cent loans to buy and renovate pc tieing measures such as intensive
who was also responsible for the - - tlapidated houses in high -crime sL;veillance and targeted prosecu1993 Oprah Winfrey-hosted special nc•ighborhoods, provided they live ti' n of gang members in Westminon child abuse, "Scared Silent," ir, them. Crime in the nei~hborhood st·'f, Cali!., and incarceration prothe series features several dozen goes down, the value of the house gt.tms such as "truth-in-sentencinitiatives around the country that gves up, and cops arc clamoring for iog" initiatives in Arizona and
work to reduce crime at costs far !he opportunity.
ot~er states that require convicted
lower than the price of keeping
- Dade County, Fla., "drug criminals to spend 85 percent of
criminals in jail.
'
courts" give offenders a choice: th ~ir sentences in jail.
Most of them would be blasted Get treatment or go·to jail. A year's
But also featured are intensive
as "pork" or "social work" by outpatient treatment costs about the crunselin~ programs for young sex
Republicans, but as a police officer same as keeping an offender in jail ohenders m Texas, a radlio ~gram
in gang-ridden Alma, Calif., says for 10 days. Judge Stanley Gold- ll:llmed with a boys' club m Rich·
on camera. explaining Police Adt- stein, a former prosecutor, says on mond, Calif., that gets gang memletic League sports programs, "I camera !hat treatment works.
bers to go straight, plus numerous
still do anest peoP.le, but I also
He says, "People tell me, 'Well, ell:ampl~s .of citizens unitin$ to
teach. Arresting children, I wasn't you're soft on crime.' What's soft? drive cnmmals out of their nctghdoing anything, you know. We'd I lake a guy off dte street and I put borboods.
lock 'em up, and then they'd get hi.11 in jail, let him sit on his butt
(Disclosure note: My daughter
out, and we'd lock 'em up and ar.d watch color television and feed worked as a segment producer for
they'd get out. By playing football, hi.11 three times a day... that's hard !he series.) To see this show, get a
te~ehing different kinds of sports, or. him, right'/ How about puttin$ a tape by calling 1·310-278-8248.
we're accomplishing much more." guy on the street and make htm
(Morton Kondracke Is execuPolice-sponsored sports pro- responsible for everything he does. tlve editor of Roll CaD, tbe newsgtams - and academic tutoring Am I being soft? I think I'm killing paper of Capitol HiD.)
B!·d crafts programs- are credited lh,m."
Copyrigbtl994 NEWSPAPER
w .th rcducrng juvenile crime by 68
Expansioo of drug courts is part ENTERPRISE ASSN.
pt.rcent in Alma. It's a devastating of the 1994 crime bill.
rcO,tlke to the critics of "midnight
basketball.'' Among other progr'lllls that work feaJured in the
series:
- Beacon Schools in Harlem
In 1656, in Patuxent, Md., an all-female jury heard the case of a
ha~e federal money to stay open
woman accused of murderinJ!: her child- (The jury voted for acquiual.)
until 11 p.m. each night, providing
In 1789, Congress authorized the office ofpostmasler-gencral.

C-o-lu-m-bu-s~l-74-.-.1

.-1

nA

TV series shows crime bill wasn't 'pork'
Before they trash the 1994 crime
bill in this fall's campaigns, Republicans should watch a TV series
called "Victory Over Violence.''
Democr~IS ought to watch it and
use it as a defense of the bill.
"Victory Over Violence" is a
riveting, four -hour documentary
narrated by Walter Cronkite that
strongly makes the case that the
best way to fight crime in America
is through a combination of effective policing, guaranteed incarcemtion of serious offenders and more
prevention projects- just what the
crime bill contained.
Unhappily, TV stations around
the country that normally feed on
crime and violence for audience
share tended to give the syndicated
series terrible time slots. In Washington, WUSA Channel 9 scheduled it opposite weekend football
games on Sept 11 and 17.
One person who dlid see it was
Vice President AI Gore, who
praised it lavishly around the White
House. Gore has been assigned by
President Clinton to monitor implementation of the crime law and recommend new initiatives.
Gore could start his job by making sure !hat members of Congress
see "Victory Over Violence"
because, even though the crime bill
has been signed into law, it needs
defending.
Republicans, though they forced
Clinton to accept major effiCiency
amendments to the bill in the
House, persist in attacking the measure as laden with "pork."
Getting them to quit will be dlifficult because trashing the crime
biU is pan of the overall GOP election strategy of devaluing every-

•

You

~

A 25-year-old hurt comes full circle
something different about her.
Finally my eyes caught the two
perfect bones of her finely chiseled
nose: She's had plastic surgery!

Showers forecast for Ohio over weekend

Friday, Sept. 23

able to conceive of things this way
- and t!ns phenomenon has been
baseball s btggest secret weapon.
No matter how much the owners
and players abused us, we went
back for more. We suppressed all
that discombobulating stuff about
absurd profits and sa lanes and
returned to the parks and dropped a
hundred bucks for parking and
paraphernalia and overpriced beer
and peanuts and hot dogs and went
home happy.
Until now. This time, it's dlifleret t. These greedy creeps, owners
ar.d players alike, are on the verge
of destroying a national institution
because !he millions of dollars we
throw at them are no longer enough
for them. They want more, and
they want it so badly that they are
willing to sac rifice th e World
Series - the fall spectacle that has
been with us for 89 straight years,
through two world wars, economic
depressions and earthquakes - to
get it.
Because !here has been no season since Aug. 12, because there
will be no postseason play , I'm
hearing things that never really registered before. "There is a lot of
money in baseball," each side
keeps saying.
Does it ever occur to these charactcrs that all this money doesn't
cc.me from some cornucopian
erne? What they are really saying
is they think they can get Joe Spear
arid millions like him to pay $10
for a beer instead of $5, !hat they
ern squeeze him for $15 a month
for his sports channel instead of
$ 0.
I am getting disgusted and I susJll'Ct others are, too. Could !his be
the strike that destroyed the
ro..nance?
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
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The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

OHIO Weather

Strike jeopardizes baseball's romance

The faee staring out at me from
the front-page newspaper photo, a
receptionist at a local business, was
strangely familiar yet unsettling. ''l
think I remember that face," I
thought, " but not quite."
I glanced at the culline and saw
the first name and instantly knew
who she was. "Rita, of course!
After all these years, what's she
doing back in town?" S\ill, the
face wasn't quite right.
A few da)iS later I had an occa- .
sion to stop in the business where
Rita worked. I introduced myself.
Akron Beacon Journal, Sept. 18
.
"Oh, sure , Sarah, of course I
For years, Democrats on Capitol Hill have complained about Republi- remember you!" she said, and we
cans blocking campaign-finance reform. They pledged !hat wtlh Bill Clm- began to talk about being freshmen
ton in the White House, the job would fmally get done.
in high school together 30 years
well three weeks remain in !he current congressional session, and ago . She had been a foster child
still. ta~makers haven't completed an overhaul of campaign-finance whom everyone liked, and if I had
rules.
one memory of her it was of someThat isn't to say !hey aren't close. ~o~ the House. and Se~ate have one who persevered above all odds.
approved reform legislation. What remams ts to reconctle the differences When I last saw her she was about
between the two versions.
to enter the military.
Unfortunately, House Democrats are balking at a proposal approved by
I was totally absorbed as she
the Senate and supported by Clinton !hat would reduce the amount a polit- told me of a successful Army
ical-action committee could contribute to a candidate from $10,000 to career and her search for a new
$5,000 per election cycle.
.
,
profession post-retirement. She
The president promised to change .' he way s of Washmgton. You d sounded like the Rita I knew and
think he would bully his pals. Or ts the"· shameless behavtor the measure recounted stories I remembered,
of his effectiveness?
but still I was aware there was
Chillicothe Gazette, Sept. 15
The tong and drawn-out hope of resLming what arguably was the best
major league baseball season in a genlTdtion was finally taken off life
support
.
.
.
The real losers in all of thts are, of course, !hose who JUSt love !he
game. Losers also include !hose unseen victims -!he small-b~siness men
and women whose lifestyles and, m many cases, mere econom1c surv1vals
depend on attendance the game generates.
It's obvious, as time goes on, the only ones who really care about the
game of major league baseball don't play i~ or pay it.

Thursday, September 22 1994

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 22, 1994

Refreshments will be served. Seating is limited, so call to make reservations
with Sharon Smith or Des Jeffers at 992·2133 by September 23. The public is
invited to attend at no charge. ©1994 BANC ONE CORPQRATION.

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BANKSONE.
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Membtr FUK'

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, September 22, 1994
Page--4

After short practice week, Eastern will take on Miller Friday
Eastern did have several oppor·
tunities. On the first possession,
Ryan Buckley caught a pas~ in the
flat and as Barr says " had one
broke for a touchdown." but the
Zanesville defender caught his heel
and tripped him up. Still Buckley
gamed a big 50-yard gainer. EHS
turned it over on downs.
Later, EHS was in the shot gun
and had Bissell in the end zone
wide open. Jason Sheets tipped tiie
ball, then a defender tipped the ball
j usl before it hit beyond the outstretched hands of Charlie Bissell.
Eastern's Sheets returned the
ball 50 yards, one of many success[ ul returns by the EHS back.
Eastern took over on the Z·R 14
with a great chance to score and
outcome."
Eastern led 7-6 with II :53 to go possibly pull off the win, but the
in the game.
Bishops' defense pressured quarZanesville scored first in the terback Brian Bowen into a fumble
first quarter when Sam Cronin and Zanesville got the ball right
blasted through on a two-yard run . back.
Jason Sheets ran the ball six
That completed a 10-play suslllined
drive, anchored by six Cronin car- times for only twelve yards, but
had a good all-purpo se night for
nes.

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Corres pondent
This Friday night the Eastern
Eag les grid squad will go tD Hemlock to face the Miller Falcons in
the first of two meetings this year.
Last week, Eastern played well,
but, let opponunity slip through its
han&lt;fs.
Eastern head coach Dave Barr
smd. "The kids played hard to sllly
at 6-0 for three quarters. This was a
game of missed opportunities for
us, but we were up against a good,
physical football team. I give our
kids credit for being able to bend,
but not break. We made some big
plays defensively. The score was
cerlllinly no indicator of the final

nearly 200 yards. Charlie Bissell
ran it three times for five yards.
Buckley ran one time for three
yards. Bowen led all rushers with
six carries for 35 yards.
Buckley caught seven passes [or
98 yards in a good individual performance . Otto had two for 12.
Travis Cunis cau~ httwo for 15 and
a touchdown. Bissell caught one
for seven yards, and Sheets caught
another pass.
Bowen passed 13-33 times for
12H yards pass ing and had one
touchdown in addition to having
two punts that rolled within 10
yards. One of those came at the
st.art of the [ounh q uaner.
Barr concluded, "At one point,
we could have easily been up 21-0.
Wc made some big plays, but we
lei some get away. We came up
against a tough football team.
Cronin has may all-sUite vote. He's
a man. He's one of the best natural
runners I've seen. I think this was a
good test for us. Now, we have to
look to next week."

Barr continued, ''Miller is a
much improved football team . At
times they really look good.
They're all right! "
Last year, Eastern beat Miller
tvro times rather soundly, as the
Eagles joined in with other teams
that left Miller with an 0-20 record
over the past two seasons. In 1994,
Miller got off to a 2-0 start, but
dropped last week's game.
Did last year's big wins have an
effect on this ~ear's attitude? "I
hcpe it doesn't, said Barr, "Miller
is a capable team this year. We
c~~1'tll!ke them lightly. If it does
have an effect, I hope it gives us
some confidence... not over confi ·
dence."

Miller plays a slant tackle 4-3
mcuh like the Iron Cunain defense
of Pittsburgh with "Mean Joe"
Green. They try to penetrate the
backfield and create confusion.
Barr says, 'This defense can really
mess up an offense, but then again
if you beat the slant lliCkle, you're
of' to the races. It's much like the

blitz and the old saying that says
'hve by the blitz, die by the blitz'."
Miller lives and dies with the slant
ta.:k.le 4-3, a defense that speedsters
BJckley, Bissell and Sheets may
fi~d tD their liking.
Eastern is healthy going into the
grme, although starting two-way
sophomore tackle Chris Bailey was
out Wednesday with the Ou . Ace
receiver Travis Curtis has a
chipped bone in his wrist, but will
be able to play.
Eastern's starting line, which
Barr spoke of, "How we play mirrors what they do," is made up of
aU underclassmen, but one. At center is Eric Hill, flanked by guards
Matt Bowen and Billy Francis and
tackles Bailey and Bryan Wood .
Brian Liter and Cunis alternate at
the split end, while big Micah Ouo
is at tight end.
On the defensive line, Eastern is
ar.chored by defensive ends, Hill,
Jeff Stethem and Wally Rockhold.
Stethem and Rockhold have been
"(leasant surprises" according to
BTI.

Time is split between Geoff
\\ atson, Bailey, Wood and Don
Goheen at defensive lllckles.
Barr concluded, "We're still in
great position for this season, and
as long as the kids continue to get
better every week, we'll be capable
of beating people. I think fans will
sec a "Jekyll and Hyde" type season, but most of the time I hope the
Jeekyll comes out."
Miller is much improved offensively after scrapping its shot gun
offense and swapping it for the
more conventional "I" formation .
They like to run the option and
have some good backs. Rob Jenks
and Joey Jones are the ones to look
for.
Although Miller lost a few kids
to graduation, some good young
kids came up through the ranks,
and additionally, two key stars
became eligible after sitting out a
season last year.
All in all, Eastern shoud come
home with another win; If they
play ball!

Meigs to battle Wahama Friday for first time in 15 years
By GARY CLARK
OVP Correspondent
A large Senior Night crowd is
expected when coach Joe Johnson's Wahama White Falcon
eleven welcomes the neighboring
Meigs Marauders at 7:30 p.m. Friday as the teams resume their gridiron rivalry after a 15-year absence.
Wahama (1-3) will be coming
off one of its worst defeats in many
years following a 61-0 thrashing at
the hands of Ravenswood, while
Mike Chance~'s Marauders (1 -2)
will try and Imllllte one of thetr
best performances of the season in
a 28-19 loss to River Valley.
"We have our work cut out for
us this week.," WHS head coach
Joe Johnson stated prior tD Friday
nights encounter. "Although their
program has been down the last

few years I think Meigs is coming
back and getting better each time
out. They came back strong last
week at River Valley after being
down by a 22-0 score at the half
and that tells me that they'll keep
coming at you for a full four quarters . It seemed like they got
stronger as the game went on and
that says a lot for their conditioning," Johnson said.
The Marauders will be playing
its founh straight away game and
are still looking at another road
game at Alexander before finishing
the season at home in four of their
final five contests in 1994. Meigs
opened the year with a 42-7 loss tD
11nbeaten Gallipolis before defeating Trimble by a 25-6 margin. Last
week the Ohio based teams comeback effort fell just shon in a 28-19

loss to River Valley. Meigs averages 17 points per game offensively while giving up just under 26
points per contest to the opposition.
Meigs has 12 lettermen back
and 10 slllners (six on offense and
four on defense) with the strength
of this years Marauders being its
ofrcnsive line in addition 10 return·
ing quanerback Brent Hanson who
threw for more than 700 yards a
year ago. Meigs features a big front
line that averages 6-2 inches in
height and 212 pounds per man.
Expected tD st.art along the interior
front will be seniors Walt Williams
(6-2, 243) and sophomore Adam
Barnett (6-1, 233) at the lllckles
with junior Adam Sheets (6-3, 206)
and senior Shannon Staats (6'2.
180) at the guard slots. The center
is expected to be senior Corey Sey·

moui (6-2, 220).

ar.d pur.mit," commented Johnson.
In the backfield the Marauders
Wahama has been led offensiveutilize the services of junior quar- ly by junior quarterback Jason
terback Brent Hanson (6-0, 149) Kmg through the White Falcons
with senior Shawn Petrie (5-10, frrst four outings of the 1994 cam194) at fullback and junior Israel paign. King has accounted for more
Grimm (5-7, 133) at tailback. The than half of the Bend Area teams
wingback figures to be junior Chad oiiensive yardage with 124 rushing
Burton (6-0, 149) with senior yards and 328 yards passing. Dale
David Fetty (6-1, 172) at Oanker Johnson has tntaled 137 yards rushand senior Jered Hill (5-I 0, 115) at ir.g while Brad Stanhope has
split end.
picked up 116 yards on the ground
"They'll be big and physical," to date. Senior receiver Todd
Johnson said. "I expect them tD try Roach leads the team in receptions
and use their size to their advantage with seven grabs for 95 yards with
and in order to counter that we 'II Lane Young snaring three passes
have to control the ball more offen- for 69 yards and Keith Cundiff four
sively and keep their offense off · for 61 yards.
the field. We will also have to try
Defensively Chris Brinker, Dale
and get II people going to the foot- Johnson, Brad Stanhope, Todd
ball on defense with gang tackling Roach and Gabe Scott are the lead·

e1s in lllckles for Wahama. WHS
a•erages 10 points per game offensi ;ely while allowing the opposition 31 points per contest.
"We' ;e looking forward to
renewing our rivalry with Meigs,"
slAted Johnson. "We should have
e\erybody healthy for Friday night ·
d(;spite getting beat up pretty badly
Ia: t week by an extremely physical
Ravenswood team. We've bounced
ba~k though and will be looking to
turn things around this week."
Waharna hasn't met Meigs on the
gridiron since the 1978 and I 979
season when the Marauders dealt
the local eleven 14-0 and 26-6 setbacks. Senior night activities will
commence at around 7:00 pm with
kickoff scheduled to begin at 7:30
pm.

Southern and Hannan to decide who gets season's first win
much more physical team. We're
growing
up. If It weren't for a couThe Southern Tornadoes will
ple
broken
plays and the penalty,
face the Hannan Wildcats near
Ashton, W.Va. Friday night, when even at this point it might have
both clubs will put winless records been closer. We're going to have to
be patient, keep growing, get men• on the line.
•
Hannan is much improved over tally tougher and P,lay four good
· last season when they gave up a quarters of football. '
Although Southern looked good
:sUite record 43 points per game.
·Southern, however, winless, is in the fll'St half, its offense sputtered
the continuing process of improv- the second half, virtually getting no
. ing and gaining experience. In fact, yardage on the ground. Evans had a
: at times Southern has been both big fust half run that nearly went
exciting and offensively capable of for a touchdown, but the running
playing good ball. Both clubs, game lacked the punch it needed to
. however, are susceptible to the big
· play, something that toOk. the wind
out of the Tornadoes' sails last Friday in a 41-09 spanking by Fon
Frye.
Southern took the ball right out
of the gate and marched deep into
Fort Frye territnry. Without stumbling once, Jesse Maynard and
· company loolced like pros, picking
apart the Cadet defense to just
inside the 15-yard line-a56-yard
drive. Freshman Mike Ash had a
big 23-yard reception on the drive,
as SHS stuck mostly to an all-air
attack. It looked too good to be
· true: and it was. The story had no
· storybook ending.
Junior Jay McKelvey caught
another pass to whet the SHS fans
appetite, while senior Eric Jones
caught a nine yarder to put Southem inside the 20. Jamie Evans had
a catch and a good run in the drive
· as Southern drove to the 14 before
· stalling.
Then the defense came alive
· with several slings on the veteran
Fon Frye running backs, Bobby
Carney and Ryan Holley.
Evans, McKelvey, Fisher and
Ash were 11mong the stingers in the
: stand, but the "big play" syndrome
· dampened the SHS spirits on a
:roughing-the-kicker call on a Fort
Frye founh down.
From that point on, (:arney's
physique took over as he bobbed
and weaved through the SHS
defense, running over those who
. got in the way. FF scored three
· plays later.
. SHS hung in there to the 6:02
mark., trailing only 15-0 to a far
·more physical team.
Southern head coach Joe Hemsley said, "I was really proud of our
kids. We played some solid ball for
·nearly two full quarters against a

By SCOTT WOLFE

slllin the passing game.
Hemsley said, "In the fll'St half,
w1 moved peof.le off the line and
were successfu . They just wore us
duwn. I think we'll be okay against
teams more our size."
Evans led Southern with I0 carries for 58 yards.
SHS quarterback Jesse Maynr.rd was 11-20 for 77 yards and
one interception; a theft by Stengel.
For Southern, Ash had three
catches for 30 yards and Jones four
for 28.Defensively, Southern was
led by Evans with nine lliClcles and
SL

one sack, Junior Brian Pagel seven
taclcles, Steve Edwards eight tackles, Paul Flowers and Matt Dill
each six, Danny Fisher four, Ash
three and one sack and Jones an
interception.
Southern linemen this year are
N'ck Smith, Edwards, Fisher,
McKelvey at End, Jeremy Johnston, end Tyson Buckley, Derek
Smith, Joe Flowers, Rich Warnsley , Jeremy Michael, Eric Barnett,
Jl'C Kirby, end Jason Writesel, end
B~an Pagle, John Hannon, Scooter
Fryar and Paul Flowers.

Besides those already mentioned Travis Lisle is a defensive
back along with Matt Riffie,
Hannan's recent losses have
come to Parkersburg Catholic (286) and Federal Hocking (25-0).
Southern will have to watch for
Wildcat quarterback Ben Baker,
who can aptly run and throw, and
infamous Ron ..'Turn" Pike, the
fleet-footed running back. Jody
Chapman had one 45-yard boot
against Catholic. In that game, Pike
h~.d 60 yards and one touchdown
whle Jeremy Long added 30 yards

·
"our
Fl\EE
't MtSS at
•
Don
t TV Tone5···
Edition

Spons briefs
Pro basketbaU
PHOENIX (AP) The
Phoenix Suns and Los Angeles
Lalcel'!l are close tD making a deal
:10 send small forward Cedric
·Ceballos to the Lalcers in exchange
a draft choice, Suns president
Jerry Colangelo said.
Colangelo said completion of
the deal involved Ceballos taking a
physical and restruclllring his eon-trBCt to fit into the Lakers' salary

:cor

:c~p.

· Last season, Ceballos played 53

g. mes, averaging
3U.2 minuteS.

19.1 pomts in
•

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tc a sputtering 'Cat offense.
Baker was 4-17 passing as SlliCy
F 1ster caught two and Jason
H~ltnn one. Pike caught one and is
a t&lt;ey lllrget out of the backfield.
At Stewart against Federal
Hocking, Baker was 10-15 for 76
y~rds passing. Pike had 86 yards
n ·shing and 66 yards receiving as
H mnan had a much more potent
offense this night.
AU in all this should be a good
ball game and a chance for the
young Tornadoes to put together
four strong quaners of play.

-••
••
••
••
-

Thursday, September 22, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Cancellation of spring training
may occur if strike continues
By RONALD BLUM
WASHINGTON (AP) Acting commissioner Bud Selig is
back before Congress today, testifying about why baseball should
keep its antitrust exemption.
Selig, baseball's leader for the
past two years, will be defending
his spon following the cancellation
of the World Series for the first

ANOTHER VICTIM of the
baseball strike fell by the wayside
was St. Louis Cardinals general
manager Dal Maxvill. The former
Pittsburgh Pirates base coach was
nred from the post he had held
since 1985. (AP Ole photo)

time since 1904.
Union head Donald Fehr also is
to speak before the House
Judiciary Committee's subcommittee on economic and commercial
law along with Los Angeles
Dodgers pitcher Ore! Hershiser,
minor league lawyer Stanley
Brand, reporter John Feinstein and
Adam Kolton, executive director
of a group called Sports Fans
United.
Reps. Sherwood L. Boehlen, RN.Y., and Michael Bilirakis, RFia., will conduct the hearing in
Washingtnn.
On Wednesday, Fehr was in
Tampa, Fla., the second stnp of his
seven-city tour tD brief players on
the failed negotiations that now
threaten spring training.
In his purple pinstripe suit,
gold -rimmed shades and white
stretch limo, Detroit Tigers second
baseman Leu Whitaker didn'tlook
much like a striking worker when
he arrived for the union meeting.
Whitaker wasn'ttoo concerned
how that would look to fans who
already have seen the strike lead to
cancellation of the baseball season
and the World Series.
"I'm rich. I make money,"
Whitaker said with a smile. "I got
a Rolls Royce, limo, big house.
What's going to make me look
bad?"
Whitaker was among 47 players
from 20 teams who met Fehr on

Bulls acquire
Krystkowiak
CHICAGO (AP) - The Chicago Bulls, looking tD beef up their
depleted front line, have signed
Larry Krystkowiak to a multiyear
contract

Wednesday. Players, who struck
Aug. 12, still say they'll never
accept the salary vap owners are
demanding.
That issue - not image - is
what people should be focusing
on, Boston Red Sox outfielder
Mike Greenwell said.
"I came here in a Chevy fourwheel drive pickup and jeans does that make me a bum?"
Greenwell said. "How people pcrcei ve you does not make you what

Krystkowiak, a 6-foot-Y torward, played with the Orlando
Magic last year after stops in San
Antonio, Milwaukee and Utah.
Details of the deal were not
released.
"We arc very happy to add a
quality NBA veteran power forward to our roster," said Jerry
Krause, Bulls vice president of basketball operations.

you are.' '

"There are eccentrics in every
walk of life,'' Pittsburgh Pirates
infielder Jay Bell said. ''To each
his own."

·'Larry has the mental toughness. aunude and intelligence that
we want," Krause said. "He is a
system player, and we feel he will
bring his special brand of toughness to us."
Since the end of last season the
Bulls have lo st forwards S~ott
Williams and Horace Grant and
center Bill Cartwri ght. All three
departed as free agcnL1, Williams to
Philadelphia, Grant to Orlando and
Canwrightto Seattle.

li

After meeting with players for
more than three hours Wednesday,
Fehr said he had little new to tell
them. The sides haven't met sine~
Sept 9, and there are no scheduledllllks.
The WJion believes owners will
attempt to declare an impasse in
bargaining and unilaterally implement a salary cap.
''People ought 10 be concerned
spring training will not play out its
normal course," Fehr said.
"You're going to have tD have the
owners indicating that they want to
bargain and they want to reach an
agreement. So far, there's been
IT'S IN TROUBLE- Major League Baseball Players Association
zero indication that they want tD bead Donald Fehr takes his luggage as he leaves a hotel in Tampa,
do anything except bust people's Fla. Wednesday after a meeting with 47 player representatives. Fehr
chops."
told reporters that 1995 spring training is in jeopardy if the strike
isn't settled soon. (AP)

The Toronto Sun reported today
that the Bulls hav e rc-stgncd center-forward Bill Wennington.

Krystkowiak was originally
drafted by Chicago in 1986, but
was traded tD the Ponl and. He has
averaged 8.4 points and five
rebounds in an 8-year career. With
the Magic last year, he averaged
5.1 points and 3.6 rebound s in 34
games.
Bulls coach Phil Jackson sai d
Tuesday the learn probably will not
trade Scottie Pippen.

Major leagues may resemble glorified minors in 1995
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP)- Don't be
surprised if you-don't recognize
many names on spring training rosters.
By next spring, the AL and NL
could resemble glorified minor
leagues. Teams are slashing staffs
and officials are talking about
using any players who show up.
"You have to prepare now for
the unknown, and I don't think
anybody knows how long it's
going to be," acting commissioner
Bud Selig said. "You prepare for
the worst and hope for the best.''
Two management officials,
speaking on the condition of
anonymity, say owners are contem-

plating stirrting spring training next
year with any available players,
including major leaguers who
break ranks, minor leaguers willing
tD suit up and players from Latin
America and possibly Japan.
Selig, speaking by telephone
Tuesday from Milwaukee, said it
was too early to make those decisions. Union head Donald Fehr said
he isn't trying tD figure out management's intentions yet
"If you look at the pattern of
this so far, you have to assume the
worst," agent Tom Reich said.
"We're in an all-out war. If you
look at their strategy up until now,
it would follow that they'll use
whatever tactics they think they
can get away with in dealing with

the public to intimidate major
league playel'!l about their jobs.''
Agent Dick Moss, who is
attempting to start a new league
next season, also thinks owners
will attempt to open camps.
"I think that's probably the
plan. I'm not even convinced
they're going to implement their
(salary-cap) proposal,' he said.
"They may just go along and tell
everybody they have no money
left. It certainly would be a very
ugly brand of baseball."
At least 12 teams have cut slllff
and three more are cutting salaries.
Cincinnati, Milwaukee and San
Diego got rid of their public relations directors. Even Selig admits

there's a chance baseball will be a
smaller industry when the battle
ends.
"There's a lot of economic
damage being done, and some
clubs are going tD come back in a
very streamlined fashion." he said.
Selig's Milwaukee Brewers terminated 30 of 73 full-time employees this week, and the New York
Mets got rid of 28 of 79. San Diego
cut 25 workers, 40 percent of its
payroll.
The Cincinnati Reds, who had
53 employees before the strike,
have just seven left, according to a
management official speaking on
the condition of anonymity.
"We've got a situation where a
lot of people are going to have to

NHL players and owners still not on common ground
By KEN RAPPOPORT
NEW YORK (AP) -In a show
of union solidarity around the
NHL, players shook hands before
their exhibition games.
That was more than Gary
Bettman and Bob Goodenow could
do Wednesday following another
long session in their continuing
negouauons on a new collective
bargaining agreement
For the second straight day, the
NHL and its union met again in a
lengthy bargaining session. And for
the second straight day, they had
nothing positive to report.
On Tuesday, Goodenow, the
executive director of the NHL
Players Association, said after a
seven-hour meeting: "Some serious philosophical differences have
to be resolved if we're going to
have a deal."
. Wednesday,. Bettman sounded
JUSt as pesslmiSUC.
·'We're trying to analyze and
reconcile differences," he said following a five-hour session with the
NHL Players Association.
But while the sides al'l'arently
remain far apart on the 1ssues, at
least they're together at the bargaining table. The full-scale tallcs
will continue Monday in Toronto.
Tbe players appear to be united.
Players in the Philadelphia-New
Jersey, Torontn-Montneal and New
York Rangers-Lcs Angeles exhibition games Wednesday night
exchanged handshakes in shows or
solidarity in the labor dispute.
Goodenow left Wednesday's
meeting without talking to
reporters. He was reportedly on his
way back to Canad~ to speak to
NHL team representatives about
the two days of negotiations in
NewYm .

Dettman had little more to say.
"It's an ongoing process," he
said, repeating what he had said
many Limes before.
Wednesday's meeting was the
fourth in six days between Bettman
and Goodenow as the sides try to
fashion a deal in time for the opening of the season on Oct. I. Players
have expressed concern that owners will lock them out unless a new
bargaining agreement is worked
out by then.

Bettman has rejected the notion
of a lockout
Players have been without a collective bargaining agreement since
Sept. 15, 1993. One of the main
issues is how players are paid.
Owners are •ooiling for a system
that links salaries to revenue. Players want a free market and more
liberalized free agency, among
other things.
Bruce Driver, player representative of the Devils, seemed more

Teonla

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP)
- The owner of the pool cottaJ!C
where tennis star VilaS Gerulaibs
was found dead of carbon monoxide poisoning did not have an occu·
pancy permit for the bungalow,
A Southampton Village building
inspector said an inspection was
required for the application pennit,
and an inspector might have discovered a problem in the heating
systems.

Texas will cut employees' pay
nr &lt;l month and Minnesota said it
probably will announce layoffs.

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Kmuse acknowledged this week
that the Bulls had given Pippen no
assurance he would not be traded.
But Jackson told WMAQ-A M on
late Tuesday that he believes the
Bulls will keep Pippen.
"The Bulls signed Ron Harper
with the intention of keeping Scottie Pippen here," Jackson sa id .
"They mesh talents."
In seven seasons, Pippen has
averaged 16.9 point•, 6.8 rebounds
and 4.8 assists. Last year, his first
following Jordan's retirement, he
averaged 22 points, 8.7 rebounds
and 5.6 assists.

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Pippen, the -Bulls' franchise
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Sports briefs
BasebaU
ST. LOUIS (AP) - St. Lcuis
Cardinals general manager Dal
Maxvill, who failed to lead the
team into post-season play his last
seven seasons, was fu-ed.
The Cardinals said the new general manager would have input on
the fate of manager Joe Torre. A
search for Maxvill's successor was
expected to begin immediately.

sa: aries.

optimistic than either Dettman or
Goodenow.
"Obviously if they are meeting
for six hours yesterday and again
today, there has got to be a sense of
optimism," he said. "Our goal all
aloog has been to get an agreement.
"The fact they are talking
means it's a little brighter the last
couple of days than the last couple
of weeks. Hockey is an up and
coming sport. It' s our time right
now tD grab some of the spotlight.''

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Montreal cut 35 full -timers,
about half its slllff, and San Francisco cut43 of 94. Houston cut 19
of 62 full-time workers, Oakland
cut 17 of 71, and Pittsburgh cut 16
ol 80 workers . In addi lion , the
Pocates put about 80 percent of its
rc naining employees on shonened
w Jrk weeks.
California eliminated three of 50
positions, while Baltimore and the
N-!w York Yankees also made cuts.
Los Angeles, meanwhile, slashed

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~The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 22, 1994

Thursday, September 22, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
'

The Dally Sentrnei- Paae--7 .

Fourth-ranked,, Michigan to . face No. 7 Colorado Saturday
Dy RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
The last time Michigan played
Colorddo, Bill McCartney was in
his ftrst year as a Wolverine assistant coach under Bo Schembechler.
McCartney will be on the other
side Saturday when fourth -ranked
Michigan meets No. 7 Colorado in
Ann Arbor. And th e Colorad o
coach will be rooting for a different
outcome than 1974, when the Buffaloes were blanked 31-0 at Michi gan Stadium .
Th is year's ga me should be
muc h closer.
Both teams are 2-0, including
victories over nationally ranked •
teams in their last game . Michigan
hasn't played since beating No. 9
No tre Dam e 26-24 on Sept. 10.
Colorado crushed No. 16 Wiscon sin 55-17 last Saturday.
McCartney is impressed by the
Wolverines.
" Thi s is a very , very good
Michigan team, one of their best in
recent years," he said . "We will
have to play a great game in all
phases of the game to beat them."
Michigan coach Gary Moeller,
who was an assistant with McCartney on Schembechler's staff, has
;imilar praise for Colorado.
"They have talent all over,"
Moeller said. "In my opinion, they
arc much more athletically talented
than Notre Dame. We are going to
have to play our greateSt game ... to

win ."
The game will feature two of the
most versatile offenses in the coun try. Colorado has Kordcll Stewart,
the nation' s second -rated passer,
and Rashaan Salaam, who leads the
NC AA in scoring and is among the
leaders in rushing and all-purpose
yardage.
Mi chigan ha s Todd Collins,
whose 65 percent completion rate
is the best m school history ; Amani
Toom er, the Big Ten' s leading
receiver; and Tim Biakabutuka,
who has rushed for over 100 yards
in both games as a fill -in for
inJured star Tyrone Wheatley.
Wheatley, the preseason He isman Trophy favonte who has been
sidelined with a separated shoulder,
is practicing this week but his statu s for Saturday' s gam e is still
uncertain.
Whether he plays or not, it' s
going to be a high-scoring shootout
that won ' t be decided until the
closing minutes. Michigan is a 3
1/2-point favorite, but the pick here
is ... COLORADO 35-31.
Tonight
West Virginia (plus 15 l/2)
at No. 14 Virginia Tech
Hokies off to first 3-0 start since
1981 ... VIRGINIA TECH 24-7.

Saturday
Pacirlc (plus 49)
at No.2 Nebraska
Comhuskers 11 -0 vs. Big West
... NEBRASKA 71-0.

Three on three tourney
results are announced
The results for last Saturday's
Middleport River Festival's threeon-three basketball tournament are
just in.
One team walked away with a
$500 prize for their leaping and
sbooting in the tournament In double elimination , Super Valu, won
the 18-24 year-old age cate~ory
and the prize. This team conststed
of Racine's Hank Cleland and
Pomeroy's Cary Bctzing, Jay
Humphreys and Todd Powell.
This S~per Valu team will play
in regional playoffs in MorgantOwn, W.Va., against winners from
16 cities in Pennsylvania, Virginia,
West Virginia, North Carolina and
Kentucky.
Twenty-five teams competed in
the drizzle with no injuries despite
the slick conditions, event coordinator Pat O'Mara said.
Other winning teams earned
prizes, O'Mara said. A team
deserving special recognition was
the Four Aces, he added . This !OIl year-old girls' team had to compete with the boys and won some
games, O'Mara said.
The Don Tate Three Point
Sbootout was won by Gary Harrison. who scored the highest num -

ber of long-distance stiots on the
tour- 20, O'Mara said.
The Supersonics finished fust in
the 10-11 caJegory. Team members
included Racine's Garrett Kiser,
Jonathan Evans and DJ. Smith.
The River Rats won in the 12-13
category . Team members included
Pomeroy's Daniel Hannan and
Racine's Ty Johnson, Mitchell
Walker and Troy Hoback.
The LC's topped the 14-15 category. The team included James See
of Mason, W.Va., and B.J .
Buchanan and Mark Oliver, both of
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The Regulators secured the 1617 category. The team included
Adam Hendrix of Pomeroy, Travis
Grate of Middleport and Jarrod
Holman of RuUand.
Medley's Court earned the top
honors in the 25-34 category. Team
members included G~ Harrison
and Todd Miller of Gallipolis, John
Lambclce of Wellston and Mark
Erslan of Chillicothe.
Sponsoring the tournament were
Don Tate Motors Inc., Roger Jessie
and his staff, Tom Dooley, Mary
Beth Dill, Dick Owen, The Daily
Sentinel, Magic 101, Meigs Motel
and various others.

Scoreboard
AmhCrll SICCio 26. 16-Racky tu= M.oanificat 23. 17 (tie) ~ Tiffin Columbian,
Wcat Chc.tcr Lakota 20. 19-Grocnvillc:

H.S. sports

II. 21l-M....,. IS.

OACCC poll

'"""'ikwl

pun..•
by lbc Olllo - lioo or c... c..."' Cooda (finl-pW:o
't'otel in pmmtbele.):

Boys-Division I
lll.

him

SL Janaliuo (9) ........... - ........ .... .!S'J
2-Td. SL Fianao ................. -............ .141
3-Tol. St. Jobn'a ................................. l40
•·Cin. St. Xavia-................................. 123
1-Q~

him

llL

t.Qe. Hta.. Beaummt(ll) ................... 173

2-Do... (3) ......................................... t64
J-&lt;lydo ............................................... tl6
4-Culalia Mlrpmll ......................... t!B
S-McCONNJ!LSVIUll MOROAN...... Il
6-s..duky - - . . ....................... .......79
7-DaytA10 Camil ..................................1l
B-WllkinJ Manorial ............................ 69
9-AvonUb(l) ........ ...........................68
IO.V~n

Wr:n .......................................... 62

Othm with U ..-more polnta: II·
London ll. ll-Salan 37. ll (lie~DeUo·

l-Cin.l.ISalle (l) ............................... ll9
6- Aohlmd ........................................... 105
7. Bca\le:rc:reolt ...................... ................. 91

fauainc, Byanillc Meadowbrook l4. 15-

I· Wadawodh ...... ... - ............................ 14

Clcarcrcck 26.

9-Tillin Caiuml&gt;im ...................... - ..-116
oo.o..,m
!!

a.., ....................................

Othen with 12 ar men pdallt II·
Cuya. Falll Wtlab. Jmuil 31. 12-FiDdlay

35. tl-Kmo Roaoevrlo ll. t4-Caoocovi&amp;
30. 15-K.ettaina Failmont 2l. 16-Cin. EJ..
dcr 21. 11-Bnx:ktvillc 20. II·Worthina·
18. 19 (tio)·Hudaon, Wut Cho.llor

'on

WtUI7.

Division D
him

ELL

I· Sond,uy ~'akin&gt; (l) ..................... 166

2·ll&lt;Nu(4)......................................... 16l
) -fairview Put fairview (J) ............. I !iii
4-lmdon ..... ....... ....... ........................ 110

~~::n~.~. ~~.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

7-A'o'Orl Lake .........................................60
1-WAVERLY............ ..........................SI
9·0.,... Camoll ..................................S6
IO.Hebrool W.WOC&gt;il ............................ l4

Wolkina Manorial ................... .......... 14

at No. 9 Notre Dame
Boilennakers 2-0 for first time
since 1978 ... NOTRE DAME 4821 .
East Tennessee St.
(no line) at No. tO Auburn
Tigers' defense scored four TDs
against LSU ... AUBURN 44 -14.
Tulane (plus 29) vs.
No . 11 Alabama at Birmingham
Tide rolls over Green Wave ...
A'.ABAMA 31 -0.
S Jutbern Mississippi (plus 21) at
No. 12 Texas A&amp;M
Aggies have won 24 of last 25
regular-season games ... TEXAS
A&amp;M44-14.
No. 15 Texas (minus 7 1/2)

at Texas Christian
Homed Frogs pulled upset in
their last meeting at Fort Worth ...
TfXAS 28-24.
No. 25 Indiana (plus 9)
at No . 16 Wisconsin
Hoosiers averaging 380 yards
per game on ground ... WISCONSIN 27-17.
No. 22 Washington St.
(plus 7 1/2) at No. 18 UCLA
Bruin s rebound from lo ss to
Nebraska ... UCLA 24-10.
Baylor (plus II)
at No. 19 Southern Cal
Trojans hand Bears their first
lc ;s ... SOUTHERN CAL 21 -17.
Houston (plus 37I/2)

By ALAN ROBINSON
hang time."
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Three
The Steelers arc allowing oppoweeks into the NFL season, Pitts- nents an NFL-high 32.7 yards per
burgh Steelers kicker Gary Ander- kickoff return, including a 95-yard
son and coach Bill Cowher basical- touchdown by the Colts' Robert
ly agree they disagree.
Humphrey.
Anderson likes nice, high, deep,
Of Anderson 's 12 k.ickoffs, only
boommg kickoffs down the middle two have reached the five -yard
of the field . Cowher wants them line. The hang time has been 3.4 to
strategically placed to avoid the 3.5 seconds, a half-second less than
runbacks that have dogged the the 3.9 to 4.0 most NFL coaches
Steelers for two seasons.
want
But Anderson does agree
Cowher initially said that
Cowher is the boss, and what he Anderson's kicks weren't to blame
says is what goes.
for the blown coverage, but
Despite some rather harsh criti- changed his mind after watching
cism from Cowher for apparently game films.
disregarding his instructions in a
Cowher instructed Anderson to
31-21 victory Sunday over the kick to the right side of the field,
Colts, Anderson said he under- apparently to avoid Humphrey.
stands why the coach was upset.
Instead, Anderson's kicks were
"There's no question I need to mostly straight down the middle.
be kicking the baU a little higher,"
"Obviously, a kicker likes to
Anderson said Wednesday . "If he kick the ball high and deep down
wants to emphasize hang time, I'll the middle of the field, but Bill
do that. I'll kick the ball with more Cowher places more emphasis on

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Texas- I Paso

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Arizona

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27 ·Stanford
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T~m p le
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East Tennessee
·Ball Sta te
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Boston College
23 'P•nsburgh
Bowling Green
32 • Eastern Mil:higan
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San Diego Sta te
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Fr esno Stat e
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Colo rado
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NE Lo uis 1ana
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'Ohk&gt; Statt:t
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• Virgini a Tech
~Th ur s . ) 20
W est Virgini a
• We slern Michigan
39
Ak.ron
·Wi sconsin
31
Indiana
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• AJmy

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when the offense didn't (do much)
against Dallas, who takes the heat?
The quarterback."
Anderson, 35, denied that missing preseason camp has adversely
affected his kicking or leg strength,
or that he was preoccupied with
contract talks that have ended for
now .
Anderson, who initially wanted
$1 million a year , is in the final
year of a contract worth $400,000
this season. The Steelers pulled
their $812,500-a-year offer off the
table when Anderson held out in
tr..ining camp and are offering substantially less.
Still, Anderson said he wants to
play in Pittsburgh, despite the tension with Cowher that apparently
began during the kicker's long
holdout
''My goal has always been to
erd my career in Pittsburgh,"
Anderson said.

Football '94
Catch All The
Excitement!
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Last week: 10-3 (straight) : 8-5
(spread).
Season: 41 -10 (straight); 25-24
(spread).

directional kicking," Anderson
said. "The easiest thing is to line
up and blast the ball ... but he's the
coach. "
Cowher was especially terse in
discussing his special teams, snapping off responses or giving pointed an swers when asked about
Anderson.
"I'm not going to point fin gers, " Cowher said. "There arc
two elements to covering k.icks: the
kick and the coverage. We're not
getting a consistent effort from
either part"
Anderson accepted part of the
blame, but also pointed out he's
only one of only II players on the
coverage team - and is the player
least responsible for the tackle.
"Very obviously we have a lot
of problems. And when you're the
kicker, you're the first guy who
touches the ball. If the kick isn't in
the exact spot, who takes the
heat?" Anderson said. "It's like

Allianco Marlinaton 21. 16-Amtnda·
17-Circlo~illc

at No. 20 Ohio St.
First meeting between schools
... omo ST. 48-7.
No. 23 Tennessee (minus S)
at Mississippi St
Vols coming off worst hom e
defeat in 70 years ... TENNESSEE
2" -17.
Western Carolina (no line)
at No . 24 North Carolina St.
Wolfpack won last two meetings by combined I 12-6 score ... N.
CAROLINA ST. 45 -0.

Anderson looking to fulfill Cowher's wishes on kicks

FROM

Division D

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AI') - The ,.._
ond oloiabl woakly l1al.O m.. ~try

No. 13 North t:arolina
(plus 21) at No. 3 Florida St.
Seminoles lead nation in total
offense ... FLORIDA ST. 44 -21.
Rutgers (plus 32)
at No. 5 Penn St.
Lions lead series 20-2 ... PENN
s· ·. 55-17.
No. 17 Washington
(plus 13 1/2) at No. 6 Miami
Teams shared 1991 national
cl:ampionship ... MIAMI24-17.
No. 8 Arizona
(minus 6 1/2) at Stanford
Wildcats have won last two
games at Palo Alto ... ARIZONA
2! -20.
Purdue (plus 22)

'Appalachian Slale
• Belhune -Cookman
• Bo+se s uue
Boslon U
• Bullalo U
• Cel Poi~ · S LO
Cal State Sacramento
' C al -Davis
' C entral Florida
C omo ll
' Oanmoulh
D a ~lon
' De aware
Dralle
Ea&amp;lem Kenl ucky
' Eastern Watihi~lon
Emory a Henry
Ge~a SOI.nhern
Gra
ling
' H arvard
Holslra
Howard
' Idaho
' Indiana Stalt
• Jackson Slate
Knoxvillfl
' Leh1gh
• J.Aarshall
• Massachuse tts
Middle Tennessee
Moot ana
• M on tana Stall•
' N t~ w Hampshire
• Nonh Carolina A &amp; f
• N orthern towa
• NW louisiana
' Princeton
• Rhode lslar.d
Richmond
• Sam Houston
' San Diego U
South Carolina Stale
• Southern U
• Solithern Utah
• SW Mrasouri
• SW Te ..aa
Tenne sstte Tech
Tenno ssee-Manin
Towson
·Troy
' VaiJ:raiso
• Wil iam &amp; Mary
' Wisconsin- Sie~ens Point
'Yale
' Youngstown Stale

22

31

27
JO
29
. 26
24
21
17
27
20
20
23
30
33
20

"

18

23

22
28
16
28

"

27

24

J1
56
2&lt;
22
14
21
23

,.10
26
J5
21
19

Clladel
North Ca1olrna Centra l
l 1ber1 y
• Vrllanova
C hey ne ~ Stale
Son oma Stale
• Cal Slate Chico
St M;:ary·s. Cal.t
We stern Ke nlu cky
• Fordham
.
Penn s ~lva n 1a

'Gllorg otovwn, Ky
West Che sle1 St ale
• Avr o1a
' Au:;hn P tJ a ~
Weber Stat e
· Oav1dson
· Tennessee ·Challa nooga
Hampton
Budnelt
• l a la~~n e
' Ftor1da A &amp; M
S F AuS1rn
llhMis Stale
Mrssrssippl Valley
• Mo,gan Stala
Colurnbra
WoSI Vi1ginia Sl ate
Mame
• Murra\ Stale
' No1th e •as
Non hem Ati1ona
Con r~e Circ ut

'

27

.."
23

30

"
"

25
40

26
37
17

42

28
20

JJ

•

•
•

Jacksonville Slate
McNeese
Easl Texa s Stale
Colgat e
Brown
Norlheaslern
r\ tcorn
Cal l ulh&amp;lan
Tc nnosseo Stale
le•a s Southern
Easlem Ne.,. Me ••co
Western llhno•s
Cal Stale Noohndge
M orehead State
SE Missouri
Charle ston Southern
Alabama Slate
Kalamazoo
Y M.l
Buller
Holy Cross
S hppt~•Y Rock

14

7

16
12
3
8
7
10
20
14
7
16
6
21
18
19
6
9
10
17
10
13
10
0
24
~"9
12
10
7
15
17
6
14
10
14
12
21
7
19
7
14
19
10
I5
9
6
19
16

7
20
10
12
9

'

1J

16
7

19
10
6

'9
7

14

7
20

10
14
10
10
1J
12
21

12
3
9

'
7

1"0

"
15

20
IJ

6
17
21
13

'7
"12
15

10
22
3
6
15
7
7
13

12

• Al legheny
' Amhe rs t

30
J2

Bloom sburg
' Bmckpor1
' B•rlt akl Sl ate
' Ca hlomra S t a t ~ Pa
· Carnog1c Mollon
'Clanon
' Easf St roudsburg
' Gellysburg
· It haca
· Lebanon Va ll "3 y

"
"
,."
22
19

l6

16

17
11

Mlddlebur~

"

M 1Uersvrll e

14

u:comtng

an sl1eld

'

11
10

' M u hlenbe r~;~
RocrlllSIIIr
Spnngl reld
Susquohann!l
' Thoel
' l nnrtr Coon
'Umon . N Y
· Wa shrn gt oo &amp; Jel lerson
· Wrde nar
· W•llles
· W1 lhams

17
31

..

""

33

17

"

17

31

W111 enbero
Rat AS
· Ame ro can lnl u rna lional
Albany. N V

Cortland
Kut11own

J un•ata
Wesumnster
Sout llarn Connec ucut
S wannmollt
All red
lJela wa re Valle)'
• Alb11g hl
' I oc lo. Haven
w ~s l e yan

· Shippe nsburg
r ranllhn &amp; Marshall
' Sl l1wr ~m ce
· Trenl on
• Krng "s (Pa 1
Wayne sburg
Colb 1
Hobart
Grove C ll"f
Morav1an
Upsala
13owdoon

33
Other Games - Midwest

· Ab iVn
· Alma
· Ar1d arson
Arkansas- Monl rc eno
• AshlaJJd
' Aug usl afla . Ill
Bake'
Baldw 1n-Wa lla ce
Aened1cl lna
'Ce ntr al Iowa
C&amp; nllaii.-I!SSOUfl
' Ce n11al Ol&lt;lahorn a
'Co nlral Stale . O h•o
Chadr on
• Empon&lt;t Stale
· fe m s
Hastrngs
·Hope
towa Wesleyan
JohJJ Ca rroll
· Mankato
M•ctugan Tec h
· Midland lul he1an
• tvliSSOUII Soul hem
lvi•SSOUII Vall ey
Mount Unron
' Muskingum
• N E Mr ssou11
· Nebra ska Wasley an
· Nabra ska -Ke all\ey
Nor1h Dakota Sta te
• Nor1h Da kota U
Nonhero Mrc h• Qan
• Northern State
P1llsbu rg Sta te
• SJg.naw Va lle~
Simpson
• South Da kota StaHl
' South Oakola U
' Sierhng
Wo:q ne Si a l ~ . Mr&lt;. h
Wayne State , Neo

40

""
"

21
JO
17

"2•
26

3G
33
"19

•
·
•
'
·

la r~gsl o n

22

20

"

·

20

17

J2

•
'

23
26

•

21

"
31

45
25

'
'

36
35

""20

DtJP aurli
Franll lr n
ra vt or
NE Oklahom a
Grand Valle y
Adr1an
Gracela nd
IA:IIul!la
Culv&amp;l Sl ockl on
War1 bUIQ
Washburn

'

28

•

20
21

"

'

"
""
29

'

23

lndrana U , Pa
Pe ru
I.A•ssour1 Rolla
H1ll sda le
Doane
Wabash
St Amb rose
Ot1e 1bern
Augusl ana . S n
Sr Joseph's
Nort hweste1n. Iowa
SW Baplr sl
Cen11al Melhod rst
Ohro Northe rn
Gaprlal
MW Mrssoun
Concord•a. Neb
For1 Ha ys Stal e
Mom rngs1 de
St Cloud Stal e
St r ranc1s . til
SW l.olmnesol a Slale
1.4 •so;ou" Wes tern
Nor1h,., ood
ll lrno1s Wes leyan
North ern Colorad o
Neb•a ska ·Omaha
Ona ... a
lndr anapolrs
W1nona Stat e

"

·
·

""

Savannah Si al&amp;
• MO&lt;ehouse
' Elon
Wollard
Wes t Georg1a
Wa stltn gl on &amp; Lee
• Ark.an sas I ~Jc h
MOIIIS Brown
SE Olo.lahoma
1\rkansas-Pme BluN
• Presb~terr a n
• L•v•ngston
' A.bllene Chns11 1n
Gardne r Wobb
' El1zabe1h C•ly
' De lla State
· Mrd wesl ern Sl ate
Ouachrl a
· Fe rrum
Mrles
Ciarlo.
'Bow 1e
Fa1rmon1

Other Games- South &amp; Southwest

' Alabama A &amp; M
Ab an y. Ga
Car :;oo -Newm an
· Catawba
· C emr~l Ano.a nsas
· Ce nt1e
Easl Central Olll ahom a
Fon Valle~
' Harding
• Henderson
lenorr-Rhyn e
MISSISSippi College
New Have n
' Newbony
Nor1 olk
Nor1h Alabama
Soulht~ rn Arluns as
· Tarlelon Sl ate
Thoma s More
• Tusk.egee
• Vatdosla
V1rgm1a Slate
'West Virgmu, We st e ~an
' W1ngate
' Wrnsl on-Salem

1G
21

"
"27
21

20

24

"
20

25
22
21
J5
27
21

""52
"
22
J1

Ma~ s

Hill

" Far West
Other Games-

• Carroll. Mon l
Central Wash1ng1on
Humboldt
Lewrs &amp; Clan..
NW Oklahoma
• Occidental
Pacific lutheran
Redlands
Texas A&amp;M -Kingsvilla
• Western New Mex iCo
• Western Slate
We stern Wa sh1ngton
• Whilwor1h

liVIOQStOI"H)

35

Aoclo.~ Mounla•n
' Southern Oregon

26
18

· Awsa

"

21
19
39

31
20
36
27
21
14

' Pug&amp;l Sound
' Adams Stat o
Wh!lher
• Eastern Oregon
'Pomona · Pillt~r

• Ponland Slale
San Francrsco Stale
Mesa
• Wrllamett9
Western OreQOn

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"1J6
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"9

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Sunday and Monday, Sept. 25-2&amp;
.. WASHINGTON ... 22
ATLANTA .... ............... ... 24
In their ' 93 matchup, the Falcons were stat isticall y superior to the Redskins but committed six turnovers and
lost 30- I 7. This year Atlanta can end its streak of losses to Washington at five .
••DETROIT ............. 27
NEW ENGLAND .... I9
Last year these two teams played a tight, tense game, and the Lions barely escaped with a 19-16 wm- and
their pride- when Jason Hanson kicked a 38-yard fi eld goal with 3:56 left in overtime.
••GREEN BAY ......... 21
TAMPA BAY ........... 17
If the Packers want an NFC Central title, they can't afford to Jose intradivisional games like this one. In ' 93
G. B. beat the Bucs twice, once casil y and once with difficulty, 37-14 and 13-10.
·
CINCINNATI .......... l4
••HOUSTON ............. 20
The Oilers also need to dispose of the weaker team in their division, though they 've proved they can Jose to
any team in any given week. Houston has, however, won six in a row over the Bengals.
..INDIANAPOLIS ..... 25
CLEVELAND ......... 18
Anything can happen here, especially with Marshall Faulk running loose for Indianapolis. In last year's battle
the Colts sacked Cleveland QB's five times, scored two late TD'S and won 23-10.
.. KANSAS CITY .... ... 32
L.A. RAMS ..... ............ .... 16
It 's been three years since the Chiefs and Rams last played (and K.C. won 27-20). If it weren "t such an in your-face gesture, this might be a good time for the Chiefs to let Joe Montana rest.
MIAMI ............... 28
••MINNESOTA ...... 21
They haven't met since '88, but the Dolphins ..1ve had the Vikings ' number over the years, wmning five of
six, including a Super Bowl. This is Dan Marino 's second test against a real defense.
••N,Y. JETS ............... 26
CHICAGO ......... ,..... l7
The Bears beat the Jets 19-13 in OT in their most recent game, in '91. This is an early must game for both
teams, but N.Y. is the best prepared, having warmed up with Buffalo, Denver and Miami.
PITISBURGH .......... 24
••SEATILE ............ 23
In between flashes of competence, the Steelers exh1bit a strange Oiler-like tendency to lose to teams they
shouldn't lose to. In '93 the Seahawks beat them 16-6- so why don't forecasters learn?
SAN DIEGO ............. JO
••L.A. RAIDERS .... 20
If both teams are hitting on all cylinders, hold onto your hats. Last year the Chargers, winners of three of the
last four in this series, beat the Raiders in L.A., 30-23, then lost 12-7 in S.D.
••SAN FRANCISCO 32
NEW ORLEANS ..... l9
Can the Saints keep the 49ers honest in the NFC West? The first time they met in "93, New Orleans, 4-0 at
the time, won a 16-13 thriller. 1Wo months later S.F. pounded the fading Saints 42-7.
(Monday)
••BUFFAL0 .............. 29
DENVER ....................... 25
Another potential wild one, between teams - like their QB's - that can be especially awesome on a Monday
night when nothing much is at stake. The Bills won 27-17 in '92, the last time they met.

(Open date: Arizona, Dallas, N.Y. Giants, Philadelphia)

221 W.

6

THE HARMON NFL FORECAST

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�Page-s-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 2~. 1994

Thursday, September 22, 1994

Trapped husbai1d feels strapped to stale marriage

,Scientists discover oldest ape-man in Ethiopia
stages of human evolution probably
happened in forests, rather than
NFW YOR K (AP) - Scientists grasslands as many scientists had
have tli sc ovcred foss ils of the earli- envisioned, said Bernard Wood of
est known relative of humanity the University of Liverpool in Engsi nee th e human lineage split off land _
"It's not the savannah that
I ro m the ancestors of the African
forced us along the evolutionary
,qlC s.
The pr eviou sly unknown road," While said. "The fust sleps
sp,·c,,·s of ape-man roamed wood- seem to have been taken in a forest
land s ahout 4.4 million years ago in habitat" after the human lineage
f.(hJn[• I a, "aid resea rcher Tim split from the ancestors of the
\\'hue· of th e Uni versity of Califor- chimps.
White said the creature was
"'"· Bcr•dcy.
· 'Th" is th e fir st time we've closely related to the last ancestor
sc·c·n :1 hu man ancestor in such a shared by humans and chimps.
White and his colleagues
wmdcd environment," While said
announce the discovery in today's
Wcdr iL'.\day .
The finding suggests the first issue of the journal Nature. They
By MAL COLM RITTER
AP Scient:t' \\'riter

found fossils from 17 individuals
of the species they dubbed Aus tralopithecus ramidus. including
teeth, parts of a skull and lower
jaw, and complete bones of a left
arm.
"Ra.nidus" means "root" in
the language of the Afar people
who live in the area or the discovery and contribute to the scientific
work there. Scientists chose the
name to recognize them.
The fossils are about 800,000
years older than the earliest f1rmly
established remains of Australopithecus afarensis, which had been
the oldest known link to ancestors
of the apes.
The ramidus fossils were recov-

ered in 1992 and 1993 about 140
miles northeast of Addis Ababa.
The sile is about 45 miles south of
Hadar, where the most famous
afarensis remains, a partial skeleton
nicknamed "Lucy," were found.
Researchers uncovered the
ramidus fossil trov e after Gen
Suwa of the University of Tokyo
spoiled a ramidus tooth among
pebbles on the desert floor in
December 1992.
Analysis of the teeth and other
fossils showed a mix of traits that
place ramidus between afarensis
and a more .:himp-hke predecessor.
Wood said the work supports the
c1 ntroversial view thai modern

Staying up-to-date on medical news
takes.
1.) The organization called Peo-

pl e for the Ethical Treatment of
Anim al s ha s recently mounted a
ca mpa 1gn to discourage patients
from using estrogen replacement in
th e form of Prcmarin, the most
widely prescribed hormone
replacement for women.
According to PETA, the hor mone is harvested in a cruel way.
Mares arc impregnated and placed
in narrow stalls, where they· can't
even tum around or lie down, while
their urin e is col lected in plastic
tubes for the entire II months of
preg nan cy_ Es trogen is obtained
from the urine, purified and sold as
Premarin.
The animal rights group claims
that thi s constitutes unnecessarily
abusive treatment of horses, which
suffer "loneliness, fear and confusion"; some become crippled and
die. An unknown number of mares
arc forced to repeat the process
time and time again, until they
become exhausted and are sent for
slaughter. Moreover, the farms that
carry out this activity are not regulated by the government; therefore.
there is no responsible supervision.

Once the mares have foaled, the
young h9rses - an estimated
65,000 a year - are sold to feed
lots, fattened, used for dog food, or
utilized in the same fashion their
mothers were, as mere machines to
produce hormone.
PETA urges consumers to use
synthetic estrogen (such as Estradi-.
ol, Estcrone or Estropipate). which
is equally effective as a hormone
supplem ent and is not obtained
from animals.
For more information about this
issue, write PETA, Box 42516,
Washington, DC 20015.
2.) In a column in April, I indicated to a reader who sweated profusely that treatment for this condition with prescription drugs, such
as Pro-Banthine, is fraught with
side effects, including palpitations,
nervousness and weakness. In
response, I received scverd! letlers,
including a "Dear Abby" column,
that mentioned a product called
Drysol, which is safe and can help
reduce excessive perspiration. I
pass this on as information only,
because I have had no personal
experience with Drysol.
3.) A study published in the
Journal of the National Cancer
Institute found no association
between permanent hair colorings
and cancer deaths - with one

Sixth birthday
celebrated
Michelle Anne Weaver, daughter of Pauy Weaver, Middleport,
and the late Malt Weaver, recently
celebrated her sixth birthday with a
party at McDonald's in Pomeroy.
A Power Rangers theme was
carried out and guests were serv~
meals along with cake and 1ce
cream.
Auending were Michelle's
mother, Pally Weaver, Jessica and
lillian Lyons, Brittany Cremeans,
Zachary Whitlatch, Jarrod Hall,
JoBeth and Katie Rodehaver,
Steven Hudson, Samantha Cole,
Danielle and Nill.i Phillips, Dustin
Vanlnwagen, Eric Van Meter,
Kathy Johnson, Melia, Cassie and
Donnie Whan, Justin and Devan
Duckworth, and Barbara and
Roben Smith.

ings", "Au tumn Day'\ "'Give

Praise", "At Day's End" and "Reasons for Living". Officers' reported
were given.
It was announced that all medi-

Dear Ann Landers: I have an everything you do. Still, I've never
unusual problem that I hope you can missed a birthday or anniversary in
help me with. My wife and I are the entire 2A years. She has missed
going on what all of our friends are several of both.
calling our second honeymoon. It
I don't have a clue as to why Clara
will be our 25th wedding wants to lllke this trip. 1 can't
anniversary, and we are going ftnt believe she wants to patch things
class all the way, which we could up. I have, over the years, mentioned
not afford when we married.
marriage counseling, but Clara
Sounds like fun, right? Wrong. For wasn't interested. If she is thinking
the last 10 years, "Clara" has been about sex, 1 have a surprise for her.
mad at me. In fact, she has been so The equipment doesn't work
mad that we don't even sleep anymore.
together. I can count on one hand
So, shonofbrealdng my leg, how
the times we've had sex in the last do 1 get out of 8 vacation 1 really
four years. The last time was a flop. don't want to go on? My goal has
She said I wasn't very romantic, been to survive the next eight years
which turned me off cornpletely.lt's until our youngest child is fmished
hard to be romantic with someone with college, and then I'm out of
who has a negative comment about here.

DR.GOTT

In Maine, quality and value are inseparable. At Eastland,
we don't believe you have to sacrifice quality for value. We
just work a little harder and a little smarter to guarantee you
get the fine st value in All American casual footwear avai lable
anywhere. It's a proud Eastland Tradition - it's a way of liie.

PETER.

Prozac. Although the drug doesn't
seem to agree with cats, dogs - in
particu Jar - appear to respond to
its effects.
The potential veterinary uses of
Prozac will soon be discussed at &lt;:
meeting of the American Veterin2ry Medical Association, but Eli
Ully &amp; Co., Prozac's maker, is n01
anively pursuing its studies of the
&lt;hug's effectiveness in animals.
Although the Church of ScienIGiogy - which is opposed to all
mind-al tering drugs- condemns
the pmctice, increasing numbers of
v• t-owners arc endorsing the idea
tht medicated animals not only
mdke beuer pets but the owners are
b&lt;-ttcr off, too.
Copyright 1994 NEWSPA·
P&lt;:R ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For inrormation on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact Amerka Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

MICHELLE WEAVER
Others presenting gifts to the
honored guest were Shirley Smith,
Sue, Abc and Kip Grueser, Bill and
Betsy Weaver, Mary and Paul
Clark, Karen Gilkey, Peggy and
Joey Barton, Gertrud Kaltenbach,
and Denver and Nora Rice.

cui equipment is now being stored
at the home of Frances Goeglein.
A thank you note was sent to
Btll and Donna Ohlinger for a
donation made to the club.
A contest conducled by Agnes
Dixon was won by Barbara Fry and
Louise Bearlts. The October meeting will be hosled by Barbara Fry
at her home with the program to be
given by Dorothy Jeffers and the
contest by Lenora Leifheit
Refreshments were sel-ved by
Bubara Fry, Phyllis Skinner,
L.mise Bearhs, Lenora Leifheit,
Nancy Morris, and Dorothy Jeffers.

The annual Manley reunion was
held Sept 10 at Royal Oak Resort
Entertainment was provided by
Satin and Lace Baton Group and
Charla Burge and Marissa Whaley
perfonned a clogging routine.
Prizes were awarded to Walt
Manley , the oldest man there;
Lucille King, the oldest woman;
Bob and Jean Gilmore, the most
children; and Tony, Julie, and
Cameron Leach, the ones traveling
the farthesl
Those attending were Rose
Manley Caldwell, Yoland Bass,
Walt Manley, Janet Marie Manley,
Dale R. Sherri, Tyler and Jaimee
Little, Penny, Charla and Channing
Burge, Rosemary Hysell, Tony,
Julie and Cameron Leach,.
Roger and Connie Manley,
Donna, Maria and Amanda Meadows, Bill, Katie, Billy and Heidi
Gilmore, Bob and Emogene
Gilmore, Remley, Sandy , and
Brian Walls, Dawn Orrell and
Dusty, Roger, Jr., Margie, Chalsie
and Brian Manley, Wesley Manley,
Charles Manley, Carl and Jeanie
Halley, Gloria Manley, Tony Manley, Roland King, Lisa and Jeremy
Robinson, Cindy and Bill Capehart,
Vicky, Short and Kyle Russell,
Frank, Cathy, Racheal, and Shauna
Elliott, Rosanna Manley, Millie
Oliver, Anna Hanenbach, Lucille
King, Nancy Neutzling, and Ed
Neutzling.

By CONNIE CASS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Nei ther side of the abortion debale was
impressed by the new candor of
Nancy Reagan and Barbara Bush,
who now say they support a
woman's right to choose abortion.
Each woman kept quiet on the
issue while her husband was in the
White House upholding the antiabortion cause.
"When it counted, they never
spoke up," Elean~r Smeal, _president of the Femm1st MaJonty

By MALCOLM RITIER
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Scientists
presented evidence today that a
virus may trigger the misguided
immune syslem attack that causes
the most severe lcind of diabetes.
If such a virus exists and is
identified, scientists might be able
to devise a vaccine against type I
diabetes, said researcher Dr. Massi-

N

w~~~[E)
•

Made In Freeport, Maine USA.

lJ"IW

SHOE PLACE
N. Second Ave.

992-5627

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
In order to vote in the November 8, 1994 General Election
you must be registered by Tuesday, October 11, 1994.
Vote at your own precinct and avoid long lines at the Board on Election Day by
changing your address (if you have movaed within the county) or if you have changed
your name, by updating your registration by October 11, 1994.
The Board of Election is open Monday thru Friday, 8:30a.m. to 12 noon, and 1:00
pm till 4:30. The Board Office will be open on Monday, October 10, 1994, Columbus
Day regular office hours. The board will be open on Tuesday, October II, 1994 from
9:00am till 9:00pm. The close of voter registration in order to vote on November 8,
1994 is Tuesday, October 11, 1994.
You may also register at our permanent branch location: Meigs County Library
Hours foc the Library
Mooday thru Friday
SatuRiay
Sunday

Resides:
Summers:
Family Fortune:
First Trode:
Investment Strategy:
Bank:
Hobbies:
Dislikes:
Pet:

Foundation, said Wednesday.
Abortion foes say it's the policy
makers who matter, and former
first ladies' opinions don't carry
much weight
"I don't think anybody particularly cares what they say," said
Phyllis Schlafly, who has led
efforts to keep a strong anti-abortion plank in the Republican Party
platform.
Mrs . Bush was the first to
broach the subject publicly. In her
memoir published earlier this
month, she wrote that while she

A layeile shower was held at the
Middleport American legion
rc :ently honoring Sheila McKinney. ll was hosted by her mother,
D;ane Hendricks, and friends, Beth
Birchfield and Angie Mayer.
A Teddy Beddy Bear them was
carried out. Door prize winner was
Andrea Bartrum and game winners
were Lessie Jeffers, Linda Mayer,
and Sharon Slewart.
Others attending were Connie
and Rachael Bales, Rosalyn Slew-

Peter Hollander Humphrey Ill
1987
Southeastern Ohio
June, soiling comp, The Hamptons;
July, investment seminars; August, visiting grandparents of Palm Beach
Made in oil by Great Grandparents Hollander &amp; Edith Humphrey
Age41/2
"Pieose refer to my first book, Booster Seat in the Board Room."
The Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Company
Miniature golf, reading Wall Street Journal, video games
Market downslides, cellular phone interference, cleaning his room
Bulldog, Capital Goins ("Cop")

now:
Enler lhe Peoples Bonk Slock Picking Contesl. Compete ogoinsl Pete ... and about 600 of your closest
friends and neighbors! Jusl place 5 publicly lroded slocks in on imaginary folder and show outslonding
pe~ormonce over lhe fourth quarter. We'lllrock lhe percentage gain/loss of all enlries for 13 weeks and
award prizes to lhe top performers.
Slolus reports will be posted in every Peoples Bonk
oKice by noon eoch Monday during lhe contest. Look lor a
leoders report in area newspapers lhroughout lhe contest.
This conies! requires no inveshnent. The Peoples Slock
Picking Conlesl is sponsored by Peoples Bank Discount
· Brokerage Service. Ask foro complimenlory lee schedule.
Peoples Bonk Brokerage Services ore offered lhrough Olde
Discount Corporation, Member SIP(, NYSE, NASD. Funds
ore not FDIC insured.

Sponsored by the Discount Brokerage Seroice of Peoples Bank. Pick up
the complete rules, a list of stocks, and contest forms at any Peoples
Bank location . Deadline for entries: Saturday, October 1, 1994.

mo Trucco of the University of
Piusburgh.
Some 700,000 to I million
Americans with type I diabetes
must inject themselves with insulin
every day. Their immune systems,
which normally defend against disease, have destroyed insulin-producing cells of the pancreas. The
cause of that auack is unclear.
The new work suggests that the

Shower honors McKinney

Middle ort, OH

arl, Brenda and Missy Jeffers,
Shirley Priddy, Justin Jeffers, Carla
r.-;cKinney, Vickie and Jared McKir.ney, Bethany Boyles, Megan
C'lrk, Darlene and Ashley
lJ,mrum, Ruby Rife, Becky
T10mpson, Cathy Richmond, Jane
Beegle, Judy Caruthers, Shannon
K 1m, and Martha Anderson .
Others presenting gifts were
T .udie Stewart, Lois Burt, Otha
U 'brick, Teresa Stewart, Marilyn
and Holly Williams and Polly Martin.

\

TOPS
A new TOPS (take off pounds
sensibly) group has been formed at
Syracuse.
Presiding at the SepL 8 meeting
was Terri Hill who explained about
a new contest which will last until
th~ end of October. Members' loss
tc .aled 54 pounds. Daisy Patterson
w ts recognized as the best loser
w'th Terri Hill as runner-up. Six
new members were welcomed.
At the Sept. 15 meeting by-laws
were adopted and a worlcshop will
br held at Cheshire on Sept. 2A.
Purchase of scales was discussed.

T .1e· 17 members weighing in
n oorted a loss of 29 pounds.
Michelle Ferguson was best loser
wi;,h Rachel Cundiff as runner-up.
Meetings are held Thursday at
the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene starting at 6 p.m. For
more information residents may
conUtel Debbie Hill at 949-2763.
FISH FRY
The Lollridge Community Cenler will have a fish fry Saturday, 5
to 7 p.m. at the Lotlridge Commu-

nity Center. Bands are welcome to
perform during the evening.

I

PHARMACY
TOPICS

For any additional information, Call992-2697, or stop by our office at
112 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio.

~brit-11;!

At hens

li.l-lt\i

\9;-776 1

!leipre
·W -71 16

K96·2J(f)

Lowell

him? I need your opinion on this,
Ann. It's eating me up.-- SEATll.E,
Ann
WASH.
Landers
DEAR SEATILE: or course it
would have been beller if Jeff had
"1994. Lo1 Angeles
T 1me s Synd•ca1e and
leveled with you before you
Cr ea1CM5 S yno~eare·
married, but he didn't - so accept
the fact that he was guilty of the sin
of omission, and go on from there.
Forget to saw so'"" of your faI agree that Jeff is deeply voriu Ann LANius columns? ··Nugembarrassed that Jane played him gets and Doozies" is the IUISWtr.
for a fool. What matters now is that Send a u/f-addressed, long, busiyou got the guy and Jane didn't, so lltSS·siu envelofN and a checlc or
forget about the rest of it- it's small
money order for $5 (this includes
potatoes.
poslllge ar.d handling) to: Nuggets,
Gem of the Day: Know when to clo Ann Landers, P.O. Box ll562,
tune out If you listen to too much Chicago, Ill. &amp;1611-0562. (In Canadvtce, you may wmd up makmg ada, sellfi $6 )
other people's mistakes.

had personal objections to abortion,
she believed abortion should be
legal for women who seek it
That disclosure prompted an
inlerviewer to ask Mrs. Reagan on
Tuesday night whether she also
withheld a pro-choice view in deference to her hushand.
"I don't believe in abortion,"
Mrs. Reagan answered. "On the
other hand, I believe in a woman's
choice.
''That puts me somewhere in
the middle, but I don't know what
to call that," she said.

Colleen Parro, executive director of Schlafly's Republican
National Coalition for Life, said
Mrs. Reagan's statement was clearly pro-choice, but reflected an
''unclear, ambivalent, inconsistent

position" suggesting she had not
studied the issue.
"It's like saying I don't believe
in slavery, but people have the
right to own slaves if they
choose," Parro said.
· Smeal suggested that Mn;. Bush
and Mrs. Reagan may have voiced
their opinions now as part of an
organized effort to soften the

Republicans' position on abonion. responding as a private citizen..-·
thereby appealing to a wider range Anthony said. " I don ' t think she
of voters.
felt it was her right to address cer"What difference does it make tain public, controversial iss ues
how they personally feel when m while she was first lady."
fact they were part of administraIn her book , Mrs. Bush wrote
tions installing some very punitive thai ~.bortion was the " toughe st
programs for women?" she asked.
1ssue she faced whtle campaign Historian Carl Sferrazza Antho- mg.
ny posed the question to Mrs. Rea"Everyone, it seemed, uicd to
gan while she was appearing as mdke me say how I felt about the
part of a George Washington Uni- issue, hoping to caLch me disagreeversity course on the role of the ing with George," she wrote. "1
first lady . He said she was not honestly felt, and still feel , the
warned that it would be asked.
elected ~~frson' s opinion is the one
"Last night she was merelv the public has the right to know ."

Good aide effect: women who took estrogen for five years
following menopause reduced their risk of forming
cataracts by 10 percent, a University of Wlaconsln
opthalmologlat found. Taking the hormone for 20 years cut
the rlak by 35 percent

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Captoprll, a hypertension drug, dramatically reduced kidney
damage and failure In Insulin-dependent diabetics, The New
England Journal ol Medicine reported on studies at Iowa
College of Medicine.
Doctors at Duke University found that there's something In
orange peel oil that stopa or ahrlnks broaat cancer In rata.
Human trials are now under way In England. (Note: dcHt
yourself dosing Ia not recommended, because high doses
of orange peel Irritate the atomach.)
New surgery that removes 20 to 30 percent of damaged
tung tissue -ms to eaae the effects of emphyaema, a
cheat surgeon at Washington University at St. Louis
reported. Before surgery, /atlents underwent a tung
rehabilitation program-an promised never to smoke
* * *
again.

The Plaons
797-4547

nJDOnly
376-7123 '

and can often be controlled through
diet and exercise.
Genes play a role in type I diabetes, and Trucco said the virus
would cause trouble only in people
whose genes make them vulnerable
to the disease.
Viruses have been suggested as
a cause of the immune system
auack before, but researchers have

IJeen moving away from that idea
in the last several years, said Kenneth Farber, executive director of
the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
International.
Trucco's new work is "a
provocati vc finding that needs to
be followed up," Farber said. "It
will be, you can -count on it."
The work appears in today's

issue of the journal Nature. Trucco
and colleagues examined immune
system cells taken from the pancreases of two young boys who
died soon after they were diag.
nosed with type I diabetes.
Researchers are now trying to
identify the retrovirus from the two
patient's pancreases, Trucco said.

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753-19\5

immune system attacks the pancreas cells when it is attracted by a
prolein on their surfaces that comes
from a virus infection.
Type I diabetes, also called
juvenile diabetes, usually appears
in childhood or adolescence. It is
more severe than the other main
form of diabetes, called type II,
which usually appears after age 30

BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

9:00 am till 9:00 pm
9:00am till 5:00pm
1:00pm till5:00 pm

Also register on the Meigs County Bookmobile at its designated stops.

rear.

en.barrwect by the-fact that she used

--Society scrapbook--

but first:

Born :

Before we got hack together afler
a three-year separation, Jeff dated a
woman I'll call "Jane." They went
together for over a
After Jeff
and I manied,l fourid out that he is
still paying off a loan he co-signed
for Jane, which in my opinion, she
won't pay because she is bitter about
our marriage. Jeff is also malcing
payments on a $1,000 necklace he
bought for her.
I know Jeff has no interest in her
romantically, but is it wrong for me
to be armoyed by this• It would have
been so much bew:r if we could have
started out debt-free with a clean
slate. It bugs me that he didn't tell
me about all this garbage before we
got married, instead of letting it leak
out laler. Can it he that he was

Virus may trigger most severe kind of Diabetes, study says

PEOPLES BANK'S ANNUAL STOCK PICKING CONTEST!

Name:

Please give me some help. -TRAPPED IN CALIFORNIA
DE.J\R CALIFOP.NIA: It sounds
to me as if Clara manged this
'second honeymoon' because she
really is interested in romance. Why
not meet her halfway?
You two are in desperate need of
counseling. I hope Clara will agree
to start there. If each of you will
give just a little, it could be the
beginning of a fresh stan. Who
lmows, the equipment might even
work again. Did you know that
where sex is concerned, the most
viiJII part of the human anatomy is
the brain?
Dear Ann Landers: I recently
married my high school sweetheart.
111 call him "Jeff."

Former GOP First Ladies break silence on abortion

Family
•
reunton

Better health club program
focuses on women's health
A program on Women's Health
Month was presented by Lenora
Leifheit at a recent meeting of the
Rock Sprin~s Beuer Health Club
held at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church and hosted by
Dorothy Jeffers.
Phyllis Skinner presided at the
m~ting which opened with the
Lord's Prayer and pledge to the
llag. Louise Bearhs had devotions
using several poem, "In Gather-

exception: Women who used black
hair dyes for at least 20 years had a
slight increase in the risk of lymphoma and multiple myeloma, two
forms of blood cell cancer.
4.) The recent emphasis on the
m-xlerate consumption of red wine
to reduce the risk of coronary dise2se has caused many people to
switch to this bevemge. In a leuer
tQ the editor in the May 23
Archives of lnlemal Medicine, Dr.
Aiexander Chester reported on a
study he performed, during which
ht noted that almost 30 percent of
his patients experienced fatigue and
fa~ial (sinus) pressure afler drinking red wine. Such wine contains
substances (especially 5-hydroxytryptamine) that can inhibit circulation.
These chemicals are not present
in white wine or beer. Dr. Chester
advises doctors to question their
patients about the use of red wine,
if the patients suffer from unexplained fatigue, sinus pressure or
m:graine headaches.
5 .) The anti-depressant drug
Prozac has become fashionable
therapy for a variety of emotional
ailments, principally in people who
ar~ down-in-the-dumps. However,
the medicine is now being used
e' tensivel y in animals, according
lc an article in The Wall Street
Journal. Dogs who mutilale them selves or who are unruly, pardkeets
who pick their feathers and rabbits
wtth nervous problems are finding
life more enjoyable, apparently, on

said the environment apparently
contained abundant trees but was
not a lush rainforest
Eric Delson, anthropology profe:;sor at Lehman College in New
Y Jrlc, said more srudy was needed
tc confirm the idea that ramidus
li •ed in the w&lt;Y.Jds.
White said scientists have not
yr.t found any bones from below
th: waist, which they hope to usc in
determining whether ramidus typic: lly walked on two legs or four.
S Jllle indirect evidence suggests it
w1lked on two legs as its descendant afarensis did, he said.

\Vhere We Come From
Honest Values Are
A Way Of life.

-

By PETER H. GOTI, M.D.
Periodically, I like 10 update my
readers on tidbits of recent medical
information . Here arc five short-

h~man s are more closely relaled to
chimps than to gorillas.
The idea that ramidus lived in
woodlands comes from analyzing
sediments and fossils from hund eds of mammals found along
wllh the ramidus remains. The
analysis is presented in a Nature
pLper by Giday WoldeGabriel of
Los Alamos NatiOnal laboratory m
New Mexico with colleagues.
including White.
Researchers found abundant evidence of forest-dwelling monkeys
and antelope that lived in bushlands and forests, While said. He

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

R.Ph.
Mon. lhru Sat 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION

E. Main

PH. 8G2-2056

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Credit Card Purchase's Get an extra 2% Savings
Empire has new merchandise Arriving Dally

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•

'

�•
Page-1 0-The Dall Sentinel

Pom

Ohio

Thursday, September 22, 1994

Whistle blower recalls fixed quiz show
By MOLLY HALL
Associated Press Writer
DENVER (AP) - With withered hands, Stoney Jackson sorts
through hi s newspaper chppm~s
from 1957 , the year he won btg
money on a quiz show and blew
the whistle on the rigged game that
he says npped htm off.
Then a crew -c ut young minister
from Tennessee. Jackson says he
was the first person to wtlltngly go
public about the ftxed shows.
Hi s complaint about "$64,000
Challenge," coupled with a govemment probe of the manufactured
drama of the quiz show "Twemyone," outraged an audience that
had been mesmerized by the live
programs. The scandal led to congressional hearings and new laws
regulating TV game shows.
The scandal is the subject of a
new movie, "Quiz Show." directcd and produced by Robert Redford. It's the story of Charles Van
Doren, a young Columbia University tnstructor who acted his way
through a bogus winning streak on
"Twenty-One,'' then finally admilJed the scam at a congressional
hearing.
The tale didn't impress Jackson .
"I guess it's more entertaining

to sec a man who kept the money
and kept hts mouth shut ~nslead of
some body who was try•.ng ~~be
h.o nest from the begmntng , he
satd.
.
,
Back m 1957, Jacksons hometown fnend.~ m Tullahoma, Tenn..
laughed when he ~~t man apphcatton .'? appear on $64,000 Questton -some 300,000 hopefuls
wrote the show each month.
When Jackson got no response,
he wrote agam , notm~ the sh~w
only seemed mlerested 10 celebnty
con.t.cstants.
. .
_The letter sa1d I am contem platmg domg a book on our present
times called the H~cksters and the
Suckers ... and I d ltke you to
please tell me what kmd of an
agent do you have to have to get on
the show,'" Jackson recalled.
. He was on a tram to New York
Ctty wtthm 48 hours.
Jackso~ quickly figured out the
program s f1x: Before the show
started, he had to answer the queslion s he would he asked on the
show. That allowed producers to
manopulate questtOnmg to control
wi~~crs and losers.
.
. They kept a very detailed tabu·
lauon of what you answered and
what vou mtssed," he satd. "Then

if they picked them· carefully, they
could keep you on or Ieick you
off."
.. Jackson, whoco~peted on the
$64,000 Questwn e1ght limes
and won $16,000, gained a measure of fame as well, appearing in
the Joe Palooka comic strip and
rccetvtng at least 40 marriage proposals from strangers.
Then he quit, planning to bone
up on his topic - Great Love Stori•.:.s - and come back a year later.
Months later, he was invited to
appear on the "$64 ,000 ChalIe, 1ge."
Before one show, an assistant
producer asked him who bestdes
Christopher Marlowe wrote an epic
poell\ about Hero and Leander. "I
started to walk out and she practically yelled at me that it was
Thomas Hood," Jackson said.
On that week's show the host
asked, "Who wrote a 190. century
poem similar tll Marlowe's 'Hero
ar.d Leander'?"
Jackson's opponent said it was
Shakespeare. She told Jackson afler
the show that the assistant producer
hcd suggested she study Shakesr.care.
What got to Jackson, however,
was this: Undefeated, winner of

$4,000 and hoping for more, he had
to stop competing when his rival
lost. The show's rules required it.
"I was furious}ecause they
chcaled both of us, Jackson said.
"I don't think they could have
stopped me shon of $64,000 legitimately."
.
His tale hit newsstands courtesy
of syndicated columnist Drew
Pearson, about the same. tt~e as
word of the more blatant nggmg of
"Twenty-One" reached the public.
"'Twenty-One' was much more
scandalous because they scripted
tt: whole thing," Jackson said.
"fhey gave them cards with the
question and the answer and when
to frown, when to smile and even
w~en to sweat."
. Back in Tullahoma, people
otJn't take to Jackson's role in the
e&gt;pose.
"From e•tre me popularity at
hLme, I went to being a bum
around town because I blew the
woJistle," he said.
Jackson , now 80, sees the quiz
show scandal as the beginning of
America's slide into darkness: "I
think that was the real kickoff of a
period of increasing frustration and
cy nicism that has continued and
grown until now."

•

f

RIGGED GAME SHOW - Stoney Jackson holds a newspaper
at bis Denver Home Wednesday from 1957 with bis name m the
headlines exposing the corruption on tbe $64,000 Question and
$64,000 ChaUenge. Jackson appeared on botb shows and was the
first to go public with fact that the show were rigged . (AP
Photo/Ed Andrieski)

c0 mmunity caIendar·--B-e-lie-ve_rs_F_e_llo-w-sh..:ip:..o_n_M_ec_h_an_ic--V-~t-er-an_s_S-er-v-ic-e

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
AA, Thursday, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart
Catholic Church.
SATURDAY
ANTIQUITY
- Faith FellowMIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Women's Fellowship, ship Crusade for Christ Church,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Middleport songfest, Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Endtime Singers and others to attend.
Church of ChrisL
Public inviled.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
POMEROY - Meigs County
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sor&lt;jrity, 6 p.m. Thursday, salad Retired Teachers Association, Trinity Church, noon luncheon Satursupper, Episcopal Parrish House.
day , June Newberry, district direcPOMEROY - Big Bend SICrn- tor, speaker.
wheel Association meeting, 7:30
POMEROY - Meigs County
p.m. Thursday at Carpenter's Hall,
Chamber
of Commerce, Golf
Pomeroy.
scramble, Saturday, 9 am. at the
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers Meigs County Golf Course.
Plains VFW Post 9053 will meet
DEXTER - The Old D~xter
Thursday, 7:30 p.m, at the post Church Homecoming, Saturday
home.
noon. Take covered dish. Afternoon sing.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary 7 p.m Thursday
POMEROY - Revival services
at the post home.
Believers Fellowship Ministry,
Thursday through Sunday, Rev.
POMEROY - Meigs County Doug Willis, speaker, 7:30 p.m.
Cleric of Court's office, legal each night, 2:30 p.m. on Sunday.
department, closed Thursday for The Dailey Family Saturday seremployee training on computers.
VIce.

MIDDLEPORT - Herb Fest, JX.tluck dinner following.
Dave Diles Park, Middleport, 10
CARPENTER _ Mt. Union
4
10
a.m
p.m.
• BJptist Church revival, located off
St2te Route 143 near Carpenter,
SUNDAY
Rev. Jesse Tipton, speaker; special
HARRISONVILLE - Har· ·noo·
SDgl
risonville Presbylerian Church will
hold IOOth anniversary service at
POMEROY
Pomeroy
I a.m. Sunday at the church, with 12&amp;12, Sunday, 7 p.m. at the

Neb.
DEAR DELORES: You can
ordet your card holder from Senior
Ease, 21st and Fairlawn, Topeka),
KS 66614-1518 (1-800-543- 3273 ·
The holder is $3 (this includes
~ipping and handling) and comes
m red, yellow, black and blue.

~~~s~~ows and they are just gorFEEDBACK: Jean Sanford of
Cnino Valy, Ariz., was looking for
a ;ource of sugar-free Belgian
cl•ocolates and we were stumped.
Linda Hallquist of Elmhurst,
II!., replied: "My husband was the
person who brought the premium,
sugar-free Belgian chocolates into
th' Uniled Stales last January.
•'The chocolales come in mille,
d2Ik and chocolate mint, sell under
tt ~ Louis Sherry label and are
becoming more and more available
in specialty stores across the coontry. If they aren't available in your
area, please contact Charles Shriver, Flavor Brands, Inc., Elmhurst,
IL'60126. He is currently sening up
th us di bib ti "
e . ' s u on.
Linda lcindly sent us some sampies of the chocolates. They are
delicious!
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
p ~-Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
QJeStions of general interest will
a( pear in the column. Due to the
v•&gt;lume of mail, personal replies
Cldlnot be provided.

Meigs County

V~~nd Peoples Line of Credit arc subject to credit approval.

Dy MAQGARJ.-.:1' POZENEL
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A federal
indictment charges that a doctor
accepled kickbacks from a medical
company that specializes in home
health care services.
Dr. Elliot Neufeld, 42, of
Columbus, was indicted Tuesday
on 26 counts of accepting and
soliciting kiclcbaclcs and three
counts of mail fraud and conspiracy, said Lisa Wright, a U.S. District
Court deputy.
The unidentified health care
company was not indicted. Dow
Jones News Service reported it was
Caremark International Inc., citing
unidentified government sources.
The company, based in Nonhbrook, Ill., has been accused of
providing lcickbacks in at least two
other cases.
Caremark would not comment

Acquisitions Jewelry
Anderson's Furniture
Bahr Clothiers
Buttons &amp; Bows
Chapman Stores
Clark's Jewelry
Dan's
Dollar General Store
Fabric Shop
Family Dollar
Floral Bouquet
Foreman &amp; Abbott
Fruth Pharmacy
General Tire

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Hogg &amp; Zuspan
Ingels Carpet
Ingels' Furniture &amp; Jewelry
Johnsons Variety Shop
K &amp; C Jewelers
King Builders Supply
Mason Furniture
Middleport Department Store
Middleport Flower Shop
Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees
Mill End Fabrics
Mill Street Books
Motor Parts

llelpre

Lowell

123-7;16

Middlepon

LIMA (AP)- An·investigation
into the death of a worker who was
accidentally trapped inside a 250degree iron foundry furnace could
take two months, a federal safety
offteial said.
The Occupational Safety and
Health Administration is investigating the death of James Newton,
43, of Lima, said Arnis Anderson,
the agency's area director. Newton
was a maintenance worker at the
Whemco foundry, about 75 miles
south of Toledo in Shawnee Township. He died Sunday.
The Lima N~ws reported
Wednesday that a February 1992
OSHA inspection found 22 safety
violations at the plant. They included exposed electrical equipment
and insufficient employee training.
The agency fmed Whemco
$4 7,925. The company appealed
the fine, which later was reduced to
$9,200.
"The company contested the
case and a settlement was made,"
Anderson said. He said it was not
unusual for fines to be reduced.
"They take into account the
financial situation of the employer

Offer expires September 30. 1994

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on the report Wednesday. The
indictment identified the firm only
as .a "home-infusion company.''
and the U.S. Attorney's office in
Columbus would not disclose the
name.
A Minneapolis grand jury
indicted Caremark, two vice presidents, a doctor and several others
in August as part of a multi-state
investigation.
An AIDS patient in Atlanta sued
Caremarlc in August, accusing the
intravenous drug supplier of paying
illegal kickbacks to two Atlanta
doctors and a phannacy, also identified as defendants.
"Caremark strongly believes all
its arrangements with health care
providers comply fully with the
law," spokesman Steve Mazur said
Wednesday.
Caremark's stock fell threeeighths of a point to 22 1/4

passed by the General Assembly,
that wtll take care of the long-range
problem .. But we sti II have a cop
lciller ltvtng tn California who we
want back in prison in Ohio."
Deters said he's considering a
lawsuit to force Woods' return
before the Ohio Adult Parole
Authority. Voinovich said he didn't
think anything could be done about
Woods.
"I was just outraged that the
parole board would let a cop killer
out," Voinovich said. "I don ' t
think there is anything I can do
about it now, but I do want to make
sure it can't happen again."
A spokesman for Voinovich's
opponent in the Nov . 8 election,
Democrat state Sen. Rob Burch of
Dover, said early today that Burch
also would support an anti-parole
measure.
''We agree with that.''
spokesman Jim Bleikamp said.
"The lcilling of a jX!lice officer is a
singularly aiJUCious act."
A bill introduced by Sen. Nancy
Chiles Dix, R-Hcbwn, calls for life

and a correction of the conditions
for which they were cited," he
said.
Whemco President William
Cook said the company had no pre·
vious problems with lhe furnace
where Newton was killed. He said
that there had been no safety problems at the plant since the 1992
inspection.
Anderson said OSHA has
returned to the plant twice since the
original investigation. Both inspections were to monitor noise levels
in the plant's grinding and chipping
area.
Authorities said Newton ttied to
claw his way out after becoming
trapped inside the furnace. Sections
of insulation around the door of the
furnace had been ripped away.
Newton had been in the furnace
about six hours before employees
found his body. The furnace door
slid shut accidentally and locked
automatically.
Officials said Newton had set
the thermostat to raise the temperature 15 degrees Fahrenheit every
hour. The thermostat showed that

SPRINGFIELD (AP) - A rash
of arsons and suspicious rues in the
city is bothering rue investigators,
who have no substantial leads
about who is responsible.
''We kind of hate to see the
night come. It seems like there's no
end to it," Assistant Fire Marshal
William Kemper said Wednesday.
"But eventually we'll cat£h them.
They'll make a slip-up sooner or

Plain Dealer says
arena name near

/

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - A deal
may be near for sale of the naming
right for the Gateway arena, a
newspaper reponed today.
Official~ of the Gateway Economic Development Corp. and
KeyCorp, a Cleveland-based bank
holding company, may be close to
a deal to name the 20,000-seat
arena Key Center, The Plain Dealer said.
Cuyahoga County Commission
President Timothr F. Hagan said
he believes the ~ may be close
to lhe $14 million that Cleveland
Indians' ownt7 Richard Jacobs paid
to name the Gateway ballpark
Jacobs Field for 20 ysrs.
Hagan said he was aware KeyCorp was in negotiations with
Gateway officials and they were
about to consummate the deal.
. Thomas V. Chema, executi~c
directa' of the Gateway Economic
Dcvdopment Corp., and KeyCorp
spokesman Lucas Del Valle both
said no deal had been finalized.
t'

in prison without parole for lcillers
of law enforcement officials. That
bill is not ex peeled to pass this session because of time restraints, but
Senate President Stanley Aronoff,
R-Cincinnati, prcdicled quick passage of the bill next year.
However, the Ohio Prosecuting
Anomeys Association is not a fll111
supporter of life in prison without
parole, even for cop killers.
"We're s~gling with that,"
said the group's Stalehouse lobbyost, John Murphy. "One of our concerns is the effect on the death
penalty, and whether JUrors might
be less apt to impose the death
penalty if they knew the allemative
was life without parole.' '
Ohio Public Defender David
Bodiker opposed the proposal.
"It is a response to a symptom,
not the problem. It makes no sense
to me whatsoever to continue to
deny judges discretion when they
are, in fac~ in the best positions to
make these decisions," Bodiker
sz,j.

Klan calls off plans for Ohio rallies
FINDLAY (AP) - The Ku
Klux Klan has called off several
planned Ohio rallies because of
problems the white supremacist
group has had with its former
regional coordinator, a Klan offi·
cial said Wednesday.
Thomas Robb, the Klan's
national director, said Ocl 22 rallies in Findlay and Kenton have
been canceled as well as others
planned in Ohio this fall.

Wednesday.
Neufeld is accused of accepting
$134,600 from a Medicare provider
for referral of patients from 1991
through 1994. Under federal law,
any payments deemed to be related
to the referral of patients can be
illegal if the work is paid for by
federal Medicare or Medicaid
money.
The indictment also charged that
the home-infusion company supplied Neufeld with nurses to staff
his office at no cost to him . It
alleges that the company provided
him with a facsimile machine and a
compuler.
If convicted, Neufeld could ~
sentenced to up to five years in
prison and a $250,000 fine on the
conspiracy charge. Each count of
soliciting and accerting kickbacks
and each count o mail fraud is
punishable by five years in prison
and a $250,000 fine.

Pinette was the only person who
had the training to "go public" in
Ohio, Robb said.
PinetiC could not be reached for
comment. His telephone number
has been changed. The Ohio Klan
could not be reached for comment.
The organization's telephone number has been disconnecled.
Robb said four rallies will probably be planned for Ohio next year.
The Klan has held rallies in several Ohio cities this year.

"The situation we have in Ohio
with Vincent PinetiC" is the reason
the rallies have been canceled, he
said.
Pinette was dismissed at the
Klan's regional coordinator after
being charged with felonious
assault in the July beating of a
woman at her Franklin County
home.
Pinette is still a Klan member
but no longer represents the group.

~--------------------------

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the temperature had risen from I60
degrees to 250 degrees by the time
his body was found.
The furnace Is designed to heat
iron to 250 degrees so the iron can
be molded into rolls and shipped
out The top heat setting in the furnace is 250 degrees.
Allen County Coroner Dr.
William Wright said Newton died
from hyperthermia, or extreme
body temperatufe. Wright said
Newton probably lived no more
than 15 to 20 minules after the door
shut.
Cook said he did not know why
Newton was in the furnace or why
he was working alone.
He said Newton was scheduled
to work Sunday. Except for security guards, Newton was alone in the
shop at the time of the accident.
Employees do not work unassisted.
"On some days, we have a variety of heat-treating furnaces that
are running and usually there's
someone in that department watching them." Cook said.
He said the company was conti .uing to investigate the accident.

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Rash of arsons bedevil sleuths

O'Dell Lumber Company
Office Service &amp; Supply
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Pool People
Quality Print Shop
Rite Aid Pharmacies
Rhojean's Reflections
Snouffer Fire &amp; Safety
Super 10
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Tri-County Ford
Trolley Station Crafts
Valley Lumber &amp; Supply
Western Auto Store

Nelsonolle

CINCINNATI (AP)- Prosecutors in Hamilton County want the
parole of a convicted cop killer
revoked, and they have found an
ally in Gov. George Voinovich.
Voinovich told The Cincinnati
Enquirer for a story published
today that he would ask the Legislature in January to eliminate
parole for convicted killers of
police officers.
"I want to malce it crystal clear
that if you kill a cq&gt; in Ohio, you
are either going to die in the electric chair or spend the rest of your
life in prison," Voinovich told the
newspaper.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe
Deters called a news conference
last week to denounce the Ohio
Parole Board's release of Ricardo
Woods on Sept. 2, afler 20 years in
prison. Woods, who lives in Palmdale, Calif., was convicted in the
shooting death of Cincinnati police
Officer David Cole in 1974.
"Obviously, I'm happy with the
governor's plan," Deters said. "If

OSHA predicts lengthy probe
into death of factory ·worker

... and let these merchants
work the ·cfor you!

Auxiliary elects officers
Officers were elected and schedule chairperson.
During the meeting presided
installed when the Women's Auxiiiary of Veterans Memorial Hospital over by Mrs. Fisher, the auxiliary
met Tuesday afternoon in the hos- made plans for a jewelry sale to be
pita! conference room.
held at the hospital on Friday, Nov.
Installed by member, Mrs. Clara . 18, and for a craft and bake sale,
Burris, were Mrs. Libby Fisher, also at the hospital, on Tuesday,
president; Mrs. Abbie Stratton, vice Nov. 22. Mrs. Stratton and Mrs.
president; Mrs. Beuy Sayr~. Jeanette Lawrence we.re named to
·recording secretary; Mrs. Carne head the annual Chnstmas door
Kennedy, corresj)Onding secretary, decoratin~contest at the hospital.
and Mrs. Jessie White, treasurer.
Refreshments were served at the
Mrs. Louise Bearhs was named close of the meeting.

POMEROY -

TUESDAY
RACINE- Rev. and Mrs. Gordon Johnson, missionaries to
P~pua, New Guinea, speakers at
R JCine Church of the Nazarene, 7
p. o. Tuesday.

In 1993, Peoples Bank put
$14,000,000 back into the
local economy in the form of
salaries, benefits, supplies,
taxes, contributions, business
expenses, etc. On average,
each dollar changes hands
6 -7 times, making the impact of our
investment close to $100,000,000.
To help you work the magic, Peoples Bank offers you a package of no-fee accounts when you support local businesses. It's
called Money Magic, an essential three-in-one account that
includes Checking, Visa and Peoples Line of Credit.
Spend $250 with local merchants and monthly maintenance
fees and Visa annual fees are waived for one year. Spend $500
and fees are waived for two years. Just have the participating
merchant validate your Money Magic card and bring it to
Peoples Bank to open your no-fee Money Magic account.
Between uJ., we'll work magic.

ASK ANNE Ill: NAN

Senior Ease also carries a card
holder (black only) that is fan
shaped, 8 inches x 4 inches and sits
on the table. This is bigger and
sturdier than the above hand-held
version and costs $18.
STUMPED: Can one of our
handy-crafters answer this one for
Helen Simons of Thibodeaux, La.?
She writes: "My husband grows
the most beautiful long, green,
shiny hot peppers. 1 have strung
them to hang in the lcitchen, but in
no time they are no longer shiny
and shrivel up. What can I do to
keep them pretty? I see them at

Monday, 7:30 at Velerans Service
o ·lice, Pomeroy.

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - American
Red Cross bloodmobile, Eastern
High School, Monday, 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.

to revoke cop killer's parole

Columbus doctor indicted
for accepting kickbacks

that's

Can ink, marker
stains be removed?
Dy ANNE 8. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: Do
you know of any solution that will
remove magic marker or ink stains
from plastic/vinyl? It is so frustrating to find a collectible object that
is marked with inks that are lilerally impossible to remove. Example:
There are many dolls worth hundreds of dollars, only to be ruined
by inks. I, and thousands of collectors, will always be beholden to
you if you can advise us what to
do. If there is no sure way to correct this problem maybe a chemical
company would work on it. RON EVANS, New Roads, La.
DEAR RON: Over the years, we
have received more letters than we
can count about this very problem,
and while some things work sometimes, not one thing works every
time. We are sure you have tried
glycerine, mineral oil, Vaseline,
cold cream, 7Up, hair spray (il
must contain alcohol) and rubbing
alcohol.
One doll collector we know has
had some success with an acne
treatment product called OxyAcne
by Revco, but notes that it must be
used with caution: If it is used on
the mouth or rosy cheeks of vinyl
dolls, it can pull the color out.
Do any of our readers have a
solution? Or are there any inventors with a background in chemistry among our readers who would
like to try solving this problem?
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I am
looking for a playing-card holder
that is round. You put your cards in
it to hold them. They are made of
two round disks and are held
together in the cenler: You put your
cards all around them. They sure
are n::e for us older people. DELORES "ffiOESTER, McCook,

Avenue.

The Dally Sentinel Page-11

Taking a lunch break--- Voinovich supports effort

Charlie Peiter took a break from the hustle and bustle or the bigh-tech Farm Science Review
near London, Oblo, earlier this week to eat bis lunch. Peiter, who was working at one or the hun·
dreds or commercial tents, round tbe shade or an old Amish buggy a refuge from the showcase or
Midwestern agriculture. (AP)

-C-om_m_i-ss-io-n,

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
OAPSE, Chapter 17, Meigs Junior
High School, cafeleria, 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

later. It's just a matter of time."
boy. But he is not a suspect in the
The city has had at least I6 earlier fues, in part because he has
unsolved arsons or suspicious fues been living in the city a short time,
since Aug. II. City officials are Kemper said.
"We just don't feel he knew the
offering up to a $5,000 reward for
information that leads to the people town well enough to do the things
responsible.
that were done," he said.
The boy, whose name waS not
Investigators believe that more
than one person was involved in released because of his age, was
the fires, including a copycat, charged with a delinquency count
of aggravated arson, said SpringKemper said.
The latest fire resulted in the field police Cap.!_. Day~d Prichard.

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�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 22, 1994

The Dally SentlneJ-Page-13

Postal official defends across-the-board rate hike
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
plan to raise all postal rates by 10.3
percent - including increasing
first-c lass postage 10 32 cents - is
a "u nique" l)roposal, made in the
face of the agency's toughest com petition ever, a Lop postal manager
says.
Electronic mail, facsimile
machines, telemarketing and automatic funds transfers arc forcmg
the post office to reevaluate all of
its services and prices, Chief Executive Officer William J. Henderson

told the Postal Rate Commission
on Wednesday .
In the meantime, the ac ross-theboard increase would tide the agen cy over for a "couple of yr.ars," he
said.
Businesses and households arc
increasingly taking advantage of
alternative types of communication, he said.
''The Postal Service mu st be
poised to offer serv ices and products which continue to meet our
customers' needs, in the face of the

increased attmctiveness of alternative delivery services, electronic
message transmission technology
and other sources of diversion,"
llcndcrson testified.
An eve nhanded rate increase is
the best way to maintain business
and increase income while the post
uff1cc reviews its se rvi ces and
prices, he said.
The independent rate co mmi ssion has until the first of next year
to rule on the request.
An Sack ler of the Mailers

Council, which represents largevolume mailers, termed the rate
plan "a transition, a bridge to the
future. It deserves a chance," he
said in a telephone interview.
Henderson drew criticism from
commission members for changes
and errors found in some of the
supporting materials the agency
provided during a lengthy series of
hearings on the rate proposal.
The ''bumbling and cavalier
way the PostaJ Service ... presented
testimony is an insult to the rate-

making process," complained
Commissioner H. Edward Quick Jr.
The 10.3 percent increase was
suggested earlier thi s year by a
coalition of businesses with large
mail volumes. Henderson was
asked if it was the only plan considered by the agency.
Henderson said the postaJ governing board considered a "3-and2" or "3-and-1" proposal, mean ing a 3-cent increase followed by a
1- or 2-cent addition at a specified

time later.
Varying increases for different
types of mail was also a possibility,
ht said, but officials preferred to
raise all rates the same pei'C'entage
while working on their complex
reclassification plan.
A lower rate with a 2-cent
increase would not have produced
enough money to meet rising costs
and a higher rate with a 4-cent rise ·
was not acceptable to the major
mailers, he explained.

Sisters found guilty of gouging out sibling's eyes
By KATIE FAIRBANK
Associated Press Writer
DALLAS - Myra Obasi said
she was possessed by a demon
when her eyeballs were souged out
of their sockets and left m a wastebasket.
A jury said Wednesday that the

devil didn 't do 11 - ner SISters did.
Doretha Crawford and Beverly
Johnson, both of Arcadia, La., were
convicted Wednesday of aggravated assault. A woman had testified
she saw the sisters pummeled and
prayed with an unresi sting Ms .
Obasi.

'Her eyes were very red," said
Dorothy Hugh es, a teac her who
spotted them on her morning walk.
" I just had not seen eyes hke that
before. They were blood red. "
The convictions are punishable
by two 10 10 years in prison. Jurors
were to resume sentence delibera-

Lions today.
Ms. Crawford, 34, and Ms .
Johnson, 35, told police they were
neeing demons, but don't remem ber how their sister lost her eyes.
Ms. Obasi, 30, testified that she
couldn't remember how she was
blinded, but doesn ' t believe her sisters were responsible.
"It's the truth," said the former
second-grade teacher, who didn't
want her sisters to be prosecuted.
Assistant District Attorney
George West accused Ms. Obasi of
changing her story to protect her
sisters. He said Ms. Obasi told
police her sisters gouged out her
eyes 10 free her from the devil.
The sisters' terrible odyssey
began March 17, when they left
their pine-forested town of 3,000
people because they believed a
devil was trying to kill them.
Their father, Chester Crawford,
suggested they visit a man named
Benny, described as a "voodoo"

or "hoodoo" man. Hoodoo com bines elements of voodoo , an
African -rooted faith modified in
Haiti, with Biblical verse and
Catholicism.
Crawford said he thought Benny
could ease family tension .
"Benny's supposed 10 be a spiritual man," Crawford said . "I
thought I was doing something to
help my kids."
After Benny said the family's
problems were due to a demonic
attack, Crawford told his daughters
to nee. They did and took their five
children.
During the two-day trip, the
women - afraid the devil had
caught up with them - left their
children with strangers in Marshall,
Texas, about 90 miles from home.
The youngsters were eventually
reillrned 10 the family.
The sisters then set out for a
friend's&gt;house near DalJas. Suddenly, Ms. Obasi began trying 10 drive

into traffic and off bridges, they
said.
Her sisters calmed her down and
they wound up in Waxahachie ,
about 30 miles south of Dallas ,
where police saw their slOpped car.
They told the officers there was a
curse on the rental car. The jury
was told the starter was bad.
The siblings then hitchhiked
in~o Dallas, about 200 mil es from
w~ere they started, where they
w"re seen praying and begging for
help.
Legayla Jones testified that she
w~tched the sisters shout and pray
for about seven hours across the
street from her house before they
ptshed garlic into Ms. Obasi's eyes
ar.d paper down her throat.
Her eyes were removed by
something sharp, possibly fingernails, doctors testified.
Ms. Obasi testified her sisters
never ha1long fmgcrnails, nor any
sharp objects with them.

HELP WANTED:
Experienced Secretary/Clerk
needed in health care facility.
Good computer skills and
shorthand required. Excellent
fringe benefits.
Send resume to:
Human Resources
Holzer Clinic Inc. ,
90 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 45631

at a small business forum at the I-X Center in
Brookpark, Ohio. (AP)

A ITENDS FORUM - Republican U.S. Sen-

ate candidate Mite DeWine, left, listens to a
question from an audience member Wednesday

DeWine attends business
forum, minus opponent
'

By LISA CORNWELL
Associated Press Writer
BROOK PARK, Ohio
Republican U.S. Senate candidate
Mike DeWine suggested that h•s
Democratic opponent's absence
from a small-business forum was
an attempt to avoid tough questions.
' "Whether the questions are
tough or hostile, that (answering) is
what we're supposed to be doing,"
DeWine said to about 150 attending lhe forum Wednesday night.
DeWine made very few references to Democrat Joel Hyatt in
more than an hour of questions and
answers from an audience made up
mostly of small-business owners.
However, DeWine told reporters
after the forum he had seen no reason to change a format that he said
Hyatt agreed to in August.
"We're not going 10 change the
format a couple of days before
merely because Joel Hyatt wants to
change it," said DeWine.
Hyatt withdrew from lhe political forum Monday because he said
the format had been changed only
to accommodate DeWine.
Hyatt campai~n spokesman
Dale Butland satd Wednesday
night Hyatt would have talc.en pan
if the original debate format had
been retained.
"The reality is Mike DeWine
was afraid to appear side by side
and face to face with Joel Hyau,"

Butland said. "DeWine wanted to
field softball questions from his
friends in the business community."

Brian Powers, vice president
. and general counsel for Small
Business News Inc., the event's
sponsor, said both camps had
agreed to a format giving each candidate 30 minutes to speak before
taking questions from the audience.
"We don't serve either pany or
either candidate," said Powers.
"We serve the smaU-business people of Ohio."
Powers admitted that early discussions had referred to some type
of debate, but he said his organtzation decided to go with separate
appearances and the details were
clearly explained to both candidates before they accepted.
The political forum was held as
part of BusinessFest 94, a two-day
event designed to provide information about business technology to
owners of small businesses.
Most of the questions to
DeWine at the forum Wednesday
night reOected concerns facing
small-businesses owners.
"We're creating a climate in
this country today that is anti-small
business," DeWine said.
"I know tbllt some regulations
are necessary, but the government
should get out of the way and
impose as few regulations on business as possible.''

Butland said the Hyatt campaign
ir-tends to continue promoting
Hyatt as a successful businessman
who stiU meets a payroU. Hyatt cofeunded Hyatt Legal Services, a
chain of storefront law offices.
DeWine, Hyatt and independent
c~ndidate Joseph Slovenec will
face each other in the Nov. 8 election to fiU the seat held by Hyatt's
father-in-law, Democrat Howard
Metzenbaurn, who is retiring after
18 years in Washington.
Hyatt and DeWine, who is
Ohio's lieutenant governor, have
agreed to debate Oct. 27.
Meanwhile, 10 days after
DeWine launched his television
advertising campaign, Hyatt joined
the battle Wednesday night
Hyatt's ftrSt spot does not target
or even mention DeWine. , Instead,
it shows blue-collar workers at
their jobs and homes, sometimes
t~jking with Hyatt, while an
unouncer declares Hyatt's determination to safeg1,1ard the retirement funds of such employees.
Butland told The (Cleveland)
PI 'lin Dealer the spot aims to give
v!&gt;ters a sense of the candidate's
" -,aJues as much as anything else."
DeWine's ads so far have
stressed his experience as a public
se:vant and his folksy style.
"I'm delighted they're trying
this approach," said DeWine campaign director Barry Bennett. "I
hope they run six weeks of positive
television. We will if they will."

Brokerage firms upset with allegations
NEW YORK (AP) - Top bro- Perkins said lhe fmn was unaware
kerage fmns reacted angrily tO sug- of any investigation.
gestions lhat some of their employPaine Webber did not return a
ees may be laundering illegal drug telephone message. Nor did Customs and IRS agents who were
profits.
A story Wednesday in The Wall called Wednesday.
. Street Journal said federal agents
The Journal said federal proseseized more than $10 million in cutors had sealed indictments of
customer accounts at Merrill Lynch brokerage fmn clients as pan of an
&amp; Co., Dean Witter Discover Inc., inquiry into whether Wall Street
Prudential Securities Inc. and brokerages showed "willful blindPaine-Webber Group Inc.
ness" when illegal drug profits
The article said U.S. Customs passed through their business.
agents and the Internal Revenue
The article said a federal task
Service were investigating.
. force is studying whether brokers
Dean Witter said it had no accept suspicious wire transfers of
lcnowledge of any investigation and funds with no questions aslced from
was "outraged" at the allegation, Panama, the Bahamas, the Channel
"which indicts our industry and
our funm."
Merrill Lynch also said it was
not aware of the investigation
described in the article and had
received no orders to freeze client

accounts.

Afu:r outlining steps the company has taken to prev.ent money
laundering among 1ts 43,000
employees, Metrill Lynch noted in
its sta!Cment that "even the best
policies and pnx:ell•JI'CS C8MOl ~­
vent an individ ..U from breakmg
the law if he or she is detennined to
do so."
.
Prudential spokesman Charhe

Islands, the Isle of Man, the Cayman Islands and Swi11.erland.
Marvin Smilon, a spokesman
for the U.S. Attorney's office in
Manhattan, said prosecutors had
seized brokerage accounts in the
past that belonged to drug dealers.
"We've had a number of cases
seizing the assets of accused or
convicted drug dealers. And in
some cases, there have been large
amounts in brokerage accOWits. As
far as I know, I don't think anybody's been charged in a brokerage
house," Smilon said.
Smilon would not comment on
the Journal report.

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Newspaper readers don't look at newspaper ads to be
polite. They aren't browsing for the sake of browsing. Or just
poking around to ki1l some time. They're looking cause they
want to buy.
In fact, 71% of newspaper readers say that's where they
turn for shopping advice. It's their medium of choice for information on where to shop and what to buy. So it's no surprise that they also rank as the best customers for products
as diverse as appliances to credit cards, investment adviee to
wine. Pretty pow10~ul stuff, that newspaper advertising. It
not only enables ·
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you to do it when
they're in the
mood to buy.
Give us a call at
992-2155

The Daily Sentinel
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mo.

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Non-Serbs decry Orwellian
conditions of resettlement
By JULUANA MOJSILOVIC
Associated Press Writer
BUEUINA, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Vojkan Djurkovic describes
himself as a nice guy, just trying to
help people get to where they want
togo.
Not so, according to hundneds of
Muslims who say Djurkovic and
his henchmen stole their homes and
belongings and forced them to travel through a war zone in northern
Bosnia to safety.
The same story is told by many
of the thousands of non-Serbs who
have arrived this summer in the
government-held town of Tuzla, 30
miles southwest of Bijeljina. They
accuse Djurkovic and his
Orwellian-sounding Civilian Committee for the Exchange of Population of carrying out a mass purge
meant to make the region pure
Serb.
Yet Djurkovic portrays himself
as a humane man who volunteers
his time to help non-Serbs wanting
to leave the region, home to about
30,000 Muslims before the start of
the Bosnian war 2- 1/2 years ago.
The United Nations estimates only
a few hundred are left.
"I only help people,'' Djurkovic
recently told human-rights activists
in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, who were
critical of the orgy of ethnic !'urges
in Bosnia's Serb-held territones. "I
help them to be transferred to

where they will feel better.''
Muslims and Croats also have
But many of the recent arrivals b(.Cn accused of using terror to
in Tuzla say they were forced from furce other ethnic groups to leave
their homes after months of intimi- their homes, but the Serb campaign
dation organized by Djurkovic.
is by far the most sweeping.
They said they finally had no
The U.N. High Commissioner
choice but to go to his organization or Refugees puts the number of
and apply to leave. Then, after pay- non-Serbs fleeing Serb-held
ing a $125 transportation fee, lhey regions at more than 750,000 since
say they arc stripped of all remain- the war began in May 1992. About
ing money and valuables and 180,000 Serbs have moved out of
dropped at the edge of no-man's Muslim and Croat areas.
land for a perilous walk into MusThe United Nations has protestlim-held territory.
ed to Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
One man stepped on a landmine Karadzic, noting in a letter Tuesday
during the journey and died this that many of those pushed out were
week.
apparently robbed and abused on
Often, Muslim men are separat- orders of "a man known as
ed from their famities and foroed to 'Vojkan. "' But words do little
do bard labor before being sent good in a region where force rules.
across front lines.
Responsibility for the purges
And some who want to stay apparently goes even higher than
despite the terror are thrown out of DJurkovic. A Bosnian Serb official,
their homes with only a few min- w~o spoke on condition of
utes notice.
anonymity, recently said Vojkan
"Vojkan told us it is better 10 go was clearing the Bijeljina region on
willingly," said Senada Hamzic, orders of Karadzic.
25, one of hundreds forced out
But Djurkovic denies wrongdoSunday night and interviewed in ing. Durmg his meeting with the
Tuzla. "He said the heads of those lights activists, Vojkan described
who do not go will roU like purnp- hi:nself as a "humanitarian work. "
ktns.
e'" forced to take money from
Hamzic said her husband and g1ateful Muslims, "although I've
brother were among the men held never aslced for it.''
back for forced labor by Vojkan,
He claimed anything owned by
who boasted: "I am rotten, but a Muslim leaving Serb-held territothey will be even more rotten by ry is actually a part of that territory,
the time you see them again!"
"Therefore they cannot talc.e that
away."

Pope cancels trip to United States
VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope
John Paul II has called off his trip
to the United States next month
because he hasn't fully recovered
from a recent fall, the Vatican
announced today.
The 74-year-old pope was due
to leave Oct. 20 for a visit to the
United Nations in New York:;
Yonkers, N.Y.; Newark, N.J. and
Baltimore.
Vatican spokesman Joaauin

Navarro said the pope had not fully
recovered from a fall in April in
which he broke his leg and needs
further physical therapy.
"It's a question of mobility, not
health," Navarro said.
John Paul underwent hip
replacement surgery. He has been
walking with a cane and has looked
frail ;md tired during recent public
appearances.
The Vatican said the pope

Land transfers posted
The following land transfers Doris I. Muth 10 TPCWD, Chester,
were recorded recently in the office 1.904 acres;
Ri~ht of way, Jeffrey and Peggy
of Meigs County Recorder EmmoMarcmko to TPCWD, Olive, 23.56
gene Hamilton:
Deed, James J. and Teresa Ann acres;
Deed, Beulah B. Wright to
Crisp to James Drown, Rutland,
Roger
Lee and Rodney Dale
.815 acre;
Deed, Sonya and Gary J. W~lfe Wright, Fonna Kay Cullums,
to Home National Bank, Racme Salem parcels;
Deed, Charles W _ Perry to
parcels;
Deed, Ralph Greathouse to Vir- Charles W. Perry, Salem parcels;
Deed, James A. and Georgia
gil L. and Lona E. Cozart, Olive,
Kroegel to RusseU WiUiarns, Olive,
2.25 acres;
Affidavit, Michael R. Harris, .314 acres;
Deed, Guy William and Carroll
deceased, to Lori L. Harris, Orange
Ann
Harper to same, Sci pia
parcels;
Deed, Kelli Norton, Kelli parcels;
Certificate, Adrian A. Carson,
McGrew, William T. Norton and
David McGrew to Kelli and deceased, to David Carson and
William T. Norton, Olive, 1.4119 Dixie Sayer, Rutland, 50 acres;
Deed, David C. and Patricia D.
acres·
oWl, Leo and Linda Morris to Hensler to David A. Hensler, SutSteven D. and Carrie B. Morris, ton parcels;
Deed, WiUiarn Grueser to Helen
Rutland, 1.117 acres;
Agreement, John W. and Henri· G. Blackston, Salisbury parcel;
Deed, Thomas M., Debra F.,
etta L. Bailey to Omega JV -S,
James C. and Rebecca Ann Drake
Chester, 7 acres;
Right of way, Cecil D. and to Thomas M. and Debra Drake,
Ruby J. Brinager to Tuppers Chester, 7.7410acres;
Deed, Dennis Palmer to Robert
Plains-Chester Wau:r District, SutG. and Kimberly K. Roush, Sutton
ton, I.SS21 acres;
Right of way, George R. and parcel.

,..d

Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Call Ua At 446-g971 and (ask for Becky)

Reasoaa•le Rates
Joe N. Sayre

IT'l ACREAl DEAl

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o ,.raJa~ corfrora
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KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

Umestone

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992-2156

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e Looking
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RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
START SUNDAY,
SEPT. 11,94
1:00 P.M.

intends to make the trip to the United States in November 1995 to
coincide with the SOth anniversary
of the founding of the Uni_ted
Nations.
"The pope was advised not to
increase his activity in this period
foUowing his thigh opemtion for a
complete and fast functional recovery," a Vatican statement said.
In the 16th year of his papacy,
John Paul has been troubled by
medical problems in recent years.
Doctors removed what they said
was a benign intestinal tumor two
years ago. He also broke his shoulder in a falJ last November.
The Vatican has repeatedly
denied the pope is suffering from a
serious illness, dismissing reports
he has Parkinson's disease.
Navarro said the I!Dpe will carry
on his normal activiues in ItaJy,
There was no immediate word
on another scheduled foreign trip:
to the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Australia and Papua New Guinea in
January.
The pope traveled to Croatia
earlier this monlh after calling off
visits to Serbia and Bosnia. The
Vatican cited security as the reasoo
for the last-minute cancellations.

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992-7013 OR
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LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal
Company, Meigs Mine No.
31, P.O. Box 490, Athens,
Ohio 45701, has submitted
an adjacent area appllcallon
to Coal Mining and
Reclamation
Permit
Numbered D-0354-3, to the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of

Reclamallon. The proposed
coal mining and reclamation

operation will ba conducted
In Molgo County, Salem
Township, Section 24 and
GoUla County, Morgan ·
Township, Section 17 and
23.
The proposed
underground mining area
encompasses 135 acres and

lo located on the Wilkesville
7 1/2 minute U.S.G.S.
quadrangle map, extending
1.6 mlloa aouthweot of
Donvlllo, Ohio. Tho
appttcatlon propoaoa to
expand the area lor lull coal
extraction mining by longwall methods.
The application Is on file
at tho olllcea ol tho Molgo
County Recorder, Meigs
County Court House ,
Second Stroot, Pome_roy,
Ohio 45769 and tho GoUla
County Recorder, GoUla
County Court House,
Locust Stroot, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 lor public
viewing. WriHon commonta
and/or raquuts tor an
Informal conference may be

sent to tho Dlvlolon ol
Roctamatlon, t855 Fountain
Square Court, Bulldlng H-3,
Columbuo, Ohio 42424,
within 30 doys of the loot
dote ol publication of thla
notice.
(Ojl5, 22, 29, (1 Oj6; 4TC
Public Notice

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'
110 Coun St Pomg~c-;, Oili!l
"Look for the Red and Whit( Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Ow1er 1-80~291-5600

9 to 5 Wookdayo
Evonlngo By Appl

~

Envuoflame :~:~~~~~:.m.
Heating, Inc.

Pellet Stoves
386 State Rt. 160
w/Nationwlde Ina.
Gallipolis, Oh.
446-7400
800-757-PELLET
7355

TOP SOIL,

FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

PUBUCNOnCE
Tho following wore
recolved/proparod by tho
Ohlo
Environmental
0.14/ 1 fl\0
Prolecllon Agency (OEPAI
laal wook. Ellectlvo dateo ol
final acllono and luuonco ,
dales ol P1opooed Acllont
and ol Draft Acllono are
slated. Final acUono may be
appealed , In writing, wllhln
30 daya ol tho date of lhlo
Li"'"'t Ha II
notice, to tho Environmental
l:lol'
U ng,
Board ol Review, Rm. 300, Shrubs Shapped
236 E. Town St., Columbus,
OH, 43215. Notice ol any
and Removed
appeal ohall be flied wllh
the director wllhln 30 daya.
Mis. Jobs.
Proposed acllono wilt
a.·ll Slack
become final unlesa a
•
wrlnen adjudication hearing
992
2269
request Is submitted wllhln
30 days of tho loouanco .,._ _ _ _ _ _ _...

992·3838

i-------....,.
TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

date;

or

the

director

rovlooslwlthdrawo

tho

proposed action. Any
person
may
submll
commenta and/or a meellng

regarding any drall action
within 30 days ol lho date
Indicated. "ACTION", 11
used

above doe•

not

Include receipt ol a verlHed
complaint. II slgnlllcanl
public lnlerosl exists, a
public meeting may be hold.
Ao to any actlon Including
receipt of verified
complaints, any person may

obtain nollce ol further
actions, and addlllonal

Information. Unle01
otherwise provided In
notices

ot

particular

actlon1, all communlcetlona

Announcemen1s
4

Giveaway

1 Small Ttrrllr House Dog

Good Wllh Chlldron.i. B11gro
Pupt 7 WMkt Old, Kt~y l"o
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.

3 Btaglt Dogs Call After 8 P.M.

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6

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Found: Small
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llpolls, 614-4411-6308.

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ohall be aent to: Haorlng
Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Box t 049,
Columbus, OH, 43266.0149
PH. (614) 644·2115. Conoull
ORC Chap. 3745 ond OAC
Chapa. 3745-47 and 3746·5
lor roqulremento.
DRAFT NPDES PERMIT
RENEWAL • SubJect to
revision
VIllage ol Middleport,
Boord ol Public Aftalra, 237
Race Stroot, Ulddleport,
8f1ct92rfn
Ohio Public Nolk:e Dolo, 0920-94, Receiving Wotore:
Ohlo River, l"aclllty
--~~~--.,
Deacrlptlon: Munlc. • 0.1 to r
BINGO
0.5,
Permit
No.
EVERY
THURSDAY
OPBOOD25'CD
Final loouance of Permit
EAGLES
to lnotall, Southern Ohio
CLUB
Cool Company, Columblo
Twp., OH Effecl(ve Dote
IN POMEROY
01113/94,
Foclllty
6:45 p.m.
Deacrlptlon : Wootrowa!Or,
Special Early Bird
Apr,llcotlon No. 08-4183,
Th a flnol acllon not
$100 Payoff
preceded by propoood
This ad good tor 1
action end le opp~~lebll to
EBR. Plant llodlllcedon ond
FREE card.
Expanalon For Melgo Mine
Lie. No. 0051-342
No.2.
111-...

PUBUCNOnCE
Th~ annual report Form
980PF lor tho Kibble
Foundation, Bernard V.
Fultz, Truateo, Ia avollablo
lor pubttc lnapectlon at
Barnard V. Fultz Law Offlca,
Ill 1/2 W. Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45760,
Three couples were issued mar- during
buotnaso
riage licenses recently in the Meigs hours lorregulor
1 period of 150
County Probate Court of Judge doya eub .. quant to
Robert Buck:
publication of thla notice.
Phillip Scott Swiney 2S and ~) 20,21,22,23,25, 21,27;
Melissa Ann Osborne, 23, bOth of 7TC
Pomeroy; Colin Robert Maidens
21, and Kimber!~ Renee Kennedy:
20, both of Racme; David Gene
Swanson, 21, and Ronda Jo Raymond, I8, both of Rutland.
(8) 22; lTC

Marriage licenses

Free Estlmales
1
$200 Installed
Call For Details
1

Delivered
Locally

Public Notice

Public Notice

windows

lost: Alasilan Malamut• Maa.

Dog, Brown

Appro1
Arwa.

7860.

Ho~

Brown Ey11,

125 Pdt, l.oalln Rodn.y
014-441-1181, • ........_

lost: Gold Wrist Watch, With
Woven Gold Chain, 014-256-

1795.

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

48117 Stote Route 850 Z1 ThN
Bldwolt, OH.
ALL Yord Solot llulll Be Pold In
Advonco. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doy bolo,. the ad ho to Nn. .
Sundoy adltton • 2:00 p.m
F~doy. llondoy ldhlon - Z:oO
p.m. soturcloy.
24, D:oo nn ?

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
AI Yonl lolol 11uot 1o Patd ..
AdoMO. 0.,.111: t:OODnt the
oloy - odltlonthe 1:0CipM
"' lll fo
Suildoy

=,.

N;:::

=r==

l&lt;fltton , 10:00a.o1o.

~~~~~=

So!ll. 2W4, 10un 4pon, Wllcli -.
for ligna.

�1994
Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dal

22, 1994
.... "([.55/1~ , THAT;ti WH~T
"· WHAT l REMEMBER

BRIDGE

I TELL 'r'Ui-1 IT

WAS 6 0

·.: ABOUT MY F"I RST VIS IT
TO T~ ' PAL"CE ....

NEA Crossword Puzzle

5 ~ K.L y

I COULDN'T KEEP
MY EYES OFF 1T.'

ACROSS

PHILLI P

ALDER

44
Yard Sat•165 Llyne St New
Haven, Sat. Sapt. 24. Range,

pels, 614·992·2218.

&amp; Auction

Daposn. 514·3811-11946.

Rick Pearson Auct ion Company,

Stove • refrigerator, Doth $150.
oldw but worb gr11t, 304-175-

2 Rooms &amp; Bath, No Kitchen,

SWAIN

AUCTION i RJRNrTURE. 62
Olivo St., Golllpotlo . Now &amp; Uaod

773-5785.

Two log ertk:lency apartments,
lumlahod, u111~1H pold, 614-m5304 or 614·992-5225.

I =-.,,-==:-::-'.:...:.:.::.:......,.,...,.

qual ity name brand merchandise. Ed Frazier 930.

9

35 Wea1 Apt. 2br, 1 bath, patio.
close lo grocery a1orH I ·~

·------

1r,

Mt. Alto Auction &amp;Yery Friday I

saturday,

(crou ro.a ds .

Rt . 2 &amp; Rt 33

Grocerloa,

new

Wanted to Buy

ping canter, water, aawer, trash
provided, $295/mo. Equal Houtlng Opportunity, 814-441-1608.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Truc ks . 1987 Models Or Newer,
Smith Bu ic k Pontiac
1900
Ea stern Avenue, Ga lllpQis .

"Tha f s how you kee p 11 wa rm ? ·

O.Coralld stonawara, wall tal•

phones, old Iampo, old thor·
mom81trs, old clocKS, arnlqua

tumhure . Rlvarlne Ant'quea.
Russ Moore, owner, 614-~·
2525. We buy 1states.
Don'1 Junk hi Sell Us Voor Non-

Working

Color

';7.;:';;;:;-;:-:;---,===,..-~

AMERICAN
NATIONAL
INSUAANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO DIS-

COUNTS
UFE &amp; HEALTH
304-586-4257

Refrigerators,

Freuare, VCH's, M6crowavea,
Air Condllloners,
W11har1,

[)ryoroL Cooy MochlnH, Powor
Toolo , •te. ~14-256-1238.
J &amp; D's Auto Parts •nd Salvage,
also buying junk cars &amp; lrucks.
304-77:!-5343.

Wanted to Do

U.rry Llvoly. 614-388-9303.
Top Prices Paid : All Old U.S.
Coins. Gold Rings, Silver Colna,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Galllpolla.
Employment Services
11

AVON I All Aroas I
spoaro, 304~75-1429.

General Maintenance, P•lntlng
Yard Worll W I - WuiiiNI
Guttoro Cloanod Light Hauling,
Commarlcll, R•ldrlntlal, S11ve:
614-448-4148.

Goorgoo Portablo Sowmlll, don't
hlul yow loa• to the mill jult
eeii304-87S-1~7.

JOil~82·2645 or1.aol).m~356.

1 Driver Neect.d To Fill lmmecbte Position For Team Run
5 Days A WHk. Home
WHkenda. Applicant Must Have
COL WHh Doubles Endort: ..
ment. 1 Yur Over The Road Ex·
pertence. EJcallent Pay HHtth
C.rt Plan, 1.aoo.362·5685.

AVON CHRISTMAS NOW!

Av.,agt $8 ..$14 Hourty At Work
·Homt. Enjoy Flexible Hours,
Discounts, And Bantfhs. T•r·

rltory Optlonol. 1~00.-,.2-47:!8.

aolute Sale I Don't Miss Ou11814·

7Vt0.

Valley Nuraery Schocl.
ChNdcaroii-F &amp;1m-5:30pm Agoo
2-K. Young School Ago l&gt;uring
Summer. 3 O.re per Week MinImum 114-446--3657.
Tribune Photographer Available
tor Weddlnga &amp; Oti'Mr Events

Coli Kovln 614-44&amp;-11519

A~or

5

p.m.

Will bobyok In my homo. 304675-4381.
Will do hand qultte, your quilts,
can ahow aump• of work,
l'itlriQI CDII $150. 304-67~7545.

Will do ho..owork. 30«754857.

Avon Wlntl lndMdUIII lnte,...

toe! In Eomlng $8 -$14 /Hr. No
Door To Door. t.-eill-15644.

Chrl1t111111 Around Tho World
Decor And lloro, Domonllaton
Naodod, Frw 5300 Kit, Eom

Financial
21

Business

FuiJ.Tlme Pay For Pairt-Tima

Worlt. Also, Booking Partloa,
614-245-5039.
Eooy World Excellent Payl M•mblo Produc:to AI Homo. Coli
Toll Froo, 1-1100-4117-651141, Ext.
313.
Eltporloncod Secnotary • Rooopo
tlonlot Wonted, Old Ellablllhed
Co. Downtown L.ocatkan. Loti Of
Rnponslbllhln, Good Pay &amp;
Future For Rlaht Individual, All

RopNn Strlclly Conlldontlal,
elA Box 332, clo Galllpollo
Dalll Trlbu~r 825 Third Avenue,

Opportunity
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
roc:om . .ndo that you do buol·
n - with pooJ&gt;IO you kMWr and
NOT to sand money ttvougn the
111111 unlll JOU han lnv•Ugatad
tho OlforllliJ
VENDING ROUTE: Won~ Got
Rich Quick. Will Go1 A St..dy
Cooh lneomo. Prlcod to Soli. 1·
IIClHZCHI782.

BMiroom Apartments, Under·
pinning, 2 Porchn, $2,500 Or
Hlghost Bid By 9/30194. Ab-

1

446-4312.
1988 OokwoodL~br., 2 1\JII both,
exc. cond., ;JM,OOO. 304-675ti8U
19~

Corro~on

14x70 3 Bad·

rooma, 814-379-2243.

2 Bedrooms With Etpando WID,
AC, SlovaiRefrlgar~~tor, Par11ally

Fumlahod, 614-245-5628.
245.0~9.

SecnotaryiCior'
needed In hHhh care •cllhy.
Good computer aldll• and thor·
thand required. E.J:callant fringe
bentltta. Send resume to
Hu1111n RIWOUICII, Holzer Clink:
Inc., 90 Jackson Pika, Galllpdla.

31

Homes for Sale

1t83 Clayton Sact.lonal Homt
24'x50' 3 Badrooma, 2 eath8
Heat Pump, I Central Air. Exca~
lent Condition, 2 C.r Garage

OH 45631.

Wllh Worl&lt;lhoo; 1112 Double
Doa Konno! • Enc!-d 18'132'

Nood Extra llonoy? Ita Fun •
Eaoy Wllh Avon. Coli O.bblo For
Dotallo, 114-25&amp;-1502.

OH $41,ouu 614·388 ..oz4.

Need man to ut whh aklarty
gentla1111n, reterancaa raquiNd.

Sp&lt;lng

304-195-31142 or 895-34211.
Nood otdor tidy ot ratl...t
couple to 111y whh aldarty
womal\ Room, bolrd and $200
per week aalary. Phone 614-ela2715 or 114-15116-41211.
Pa~

tlmo opening tor an Adaptive
Phyolcol
Educotlon
Spocllllol ot Corloton School.
Muet have or be wilting &amp;
eligible lo obtoln valid Ohio
Doponmort or Education Phyolcal
Education
Certificate
wtvalldaUon In Adlptlva P£.
Send I'Mume by Sept. 21. 11M

to Corloton Schoof 1310 Cor·
Ilion St, P.O. Box 307, Syroc-.
Ohio 457711 EOE.
Paroon To Help Wllh Corw Of El·
der1y Woman In Her Syr~~cu•
Kome During Evening Houn
Wvokdayo And 1·8 P.M. Sotur·
day's &amp; Sunday's. Phone: 11'182-7104 Aftor 8 P.ll.
R.teurant Saeldng Pl. . .nt
Worbro Day Or Evening Shlfta
Avalloblo Wrllo To: ClA 330, cJo
Oolllooilo Dally Tribune, 821
Third Avon .., Oolllpollo, OH
&lt;151131.
Trucking Compony Booking

Unaerground Swimming Pool,
Llnaca.pad. Must S.. lo Approclllo&lt;-~n SA 8~L Bldwoll,
3 bedroom, all electric home,

Avonuo,Pomoroy,

$30,000, 114-n2·2913 or 614-

1192·7304.

Pump, OU Furnace 1 Aero,
Qorago. Will Conoid'or Slnglo
Wlda On Down Pay_,t, Addloon Atoo, $82,000, 814·3877287.
3br., 1 va botft, largo lot, lllnon
Ad, C.mp Conley, vary nice.
3br. brick, 2 112 both 2V48
~~~- 0.. 30U7il-1136.
Ono bodroom, vinyl aldod on 112
aero, low uti!~,_ goa hNt

polio, llorogo bulkrlng, utllhy

room, near WMPO radio 11atlon

$23,600.114-11112~ aftor 5pm.'

Socludod Trf.l.ovol 1.18 AciN 3-4
Bodroomo, LR DR, Fomlly,
Kftchon, Utllhy, 2112 Bath, Fr011t
and Back O.cka, Corport. ClIo T-n and Holpltal 114-446111g After lp.rn.

From BA.II. -51'.11.

Alhona, Oh 457VI

Wontod: U.borwr Eltpootoncod In
Roofing l Sldng, lltat Havo
CDL Uconoo, Pay Storto AI $5
IHr, 114 118 '514 I A.ll. 4 P.M.,
'

w-..n 01 Tho WCMicl ur. lnouranco Soc!otr hoe cunwr11
oponlnga 1ar oa- , . . _
1111- In .._, O.llla • llolgo
County 111. Full -1111: two
yoar tlllnlng ~~- lor 1
aure Milt, plua oomprahenelw
oducatlon progrom. -~~~
om~
lor - tatally poorIlona! a,_h. Wa arw an •
qual -unity omployor. All
roplloo will bo otrlcUy tlal. Sond ,.,.. ........ . _...
to: Qav Ronoy, 2413
Avo.~:;:;,....
0111
I wv - . Of

Ja,.._,

N....,

$232-$355 . Coli 614-m-5859.
EOH.
Nice 2 br apls, In Pomeroy, all
ulllltloo pold, 114-11112-51!58.
Nlco

2br., WID
hookup,
refar1nce, deposit, no pet1. 304675-5162.

-·artlllng

In

lhiF-F*~Ad

oi11N18-- .llagol
1o • - 'otrt prllarwn,

-lo

lmltallon or.....,,._,

baNd on race, cokW, Nlglon,

(I(.,

-r-lflluaotmol&lt;oanyoudtpaloo•ICI,
lmlllllon

or -••••lort.'

n. """"'"""' .......
___
lor_,_
lalowli(h .......

-·!n-ollteliw.
O...ro- aro hni&gt;Y
hlormad thll .. dn•••
lllllortloodln . . ,. ror•
110 . .- o n . , equal
~,...

1--.;.;.:.:..;.=------

MIICIIIIMOU.

Knlck-Knackl,

No Colla Bolorw 8 A.M., ~7521154.
30 Gal. Hexagon Fllh Tank With
Ook Stand, 'Nhola Sot-Up lndudad,IS14 448 8342'Aher 8 P.M.
Bundy clarinet: $120. Finn Flax
by Jake $80. 4 ft oek ewing $25.

ooptlc, S12,500, 114--,.2·2157.

36

41

Smou

Houoo,

$275imo. + UUUtlos, ParkJn~ ~ o

Polo. Coli Boloro 7 P.M. 61
0338.

46

SIHplng rooma with cooking.

Space for Rent

3 A-. Ofllco Sullo Wllh
Private Toilet In Modern Fire

PJool Bldg. Coli II-• Huklno
814-44&amp;-:M31 Or 114-44f.2512.
~ .. Santa"•
Foraat on Atgf~vata, water &amp;

trail•

Houses for Rent

llobllo homo •po- lor ,.,., In
2 Bodroom Houoo 48 Chllllcotho oountrr· garbage. and
Road Full Ba..ment, Ca,.Ced, water lnc!Udod, cablo avallablo,
a.. Furnace,
•~ $85/mo., lull tO mlnut• 1rvm
Athono, 114-992-2167.
0!158.

No,..,

LA, DR, au.. Mobil Homo Iota lor ront, 304mont, Golllpolla Cfty School Dr. 175-41884.
trlct. AVII!ablo Oct 1111, S32Mio.
304-757-1013.
Merchandise
3 Bedroom, Country Uvlng, 1
Aero, 4352 Cora IIIII, Oolllpollo,

614-363-0581 Evonlngo.
3 Bedroom• Gu Furnece, CA,
N- Corpot, No Potal Dopoltt &amp;

Referancn Aequlrwd. $330/Uo
614-446-4138.
5 room1, baeam.m, rwadv OCt

111, nHd raloroncoo, 304-8752535.
HouH In Hantord, 4 rooms,

51

Household
Goods
2 Ploco Living Room Su~o,
Good Condition, $150, Col Allor
I P.M. 814-3117-0227. .
7 wlndowa • ..,,_, 1111·
In, now will Mil chNp, ~75407'1 ..onlngo l 6'111-2310 dayo,
or can 111 2802 Pine Ave, Pt Ptl.

nleo yord; In Now Haven, 5
roomo, nlco locotlon, 114-9V2· GOOO USED APPLIANCES
5212.
Walhoro dryoro, rolrlgorarlon
rang•. !u.~ga Appllancoo 7il
HouM On Brldgoman Stroot, Vlno Slrooi,-l!oll 114-448·7311, 1·
Ownod By VIllage Of SyroCUM
At MuniciPal P1t1t p 10
~1100:.:...-4:.:911-.:..:.34:.:1111.=·:__-=---$300/llo. Pluo Utllft,_ l
K
ilogoolt, Contact lloyor Papo AI
Duty - r
11C.IIV2-3420.
H6;
w."!li
Kon....,.
171; Q.E. ..,
Inch
E*t
11anao
171;
Nl01 2br. houoo, Oolllpollo F.....,ldalro 30 lndi Whho
Fony. 304-c!75-1711 onor 5prn.
·-. t121; Q.E. Ralllgomor
Range,
Nlco cottage In Pt. - . Frool Ffoo t121; UD11a1tt F,_,
I14-9V2·5858.
Uu tm· Uilrlall4 F - r
F - F~. ill tu:' 1'1. .,50;
111100 •ru Nit Contlt42 Mobile Homes
l y - Nl..-t OOkl
for Rent
~~

';'Jj

-ur~y

~
do~

2br.,

""1:ii¥

,.,.,__

tl50
pold.

ehlkl'o car waterbod, SIDD. 304875-1883.

Sbr.,

~ ~

..", clopoolt,

Block, brick. IIWir plpea, win·
dows, Unte11. etc. Claude Wln.-

ters, Rio Grande, OH Cell 614-

245-6121.

\'l:':r1 :::
71111

=-=~

- ..............,....
Or • -

Gl~

Whna Boclroan suno,

Double

Bad

U11traa

Box

Pets for Sale

Refrigerator, tr.ur on bottom,
Nno aood, p&lt;lcod to Nil, 1148112-111'.17 « 114.fi2·304t.
R1~
ora. St CWM, ~-•-......,..
And
rw, All Rocondltlonod
And Gaurantoodl SIOO And Up,
Will Dollvor. 114-1111-11441.
-aurant oqul_.. 2 roglotorw, • - i chal,.., d lr¥27..,., too much lo Ull. 3CioW75-

111':

Som Somorvlllo'o Army su~u&amp;
Frldoy"" Sot, Sun. Noon • 1: PM
only. toy Sandyville Poll Ofllco,
304-273-Gea5.
I :c.....,, - - , - . , . , - - - - Stay Worm In Your llcbllo Homo
When Tho Eloclrlc Gooo Off
Thlo Wlntor Whh An E:'f:
llcbllo Homo Will Fumoco hal
U- No Elaclrlohy. CoU Jlon.
not1'o lloblla Homo HTQ • CLO
AI -11-8411, Or 1-..?2IIICI7F01Dotalla.

..... _,,.., dlah-.~ OBO. 304-41711-21111
aftor4:vuPII.
Sot

or noovy 4rlr

bunk -

Nloo-

w-.

~11;'.,:'

Kll-

w.- ..-th

~

a

4::10 P.M. Wookdayo, Anytlmo
Weekends.

Llvntock H1ullng, Anytime,
Anywhare. Produeen, Hillsboro
Every Monday, Cell Trlppll
Crwak Trucking, Chuck Wll•

Pigs: SH Harley CrouN Or
Phone 614a37i-2167.
R-s~r.tarad Angus bull call, ••·

tl'll ntc. 1pprox 600 lba, $1.00

Trail horN, mare, $1000, 614-

Groom ond Supply Shop-Pat
Grooming. Julia Webb. 114-446-

0231.
Pampered Pete by Sonya, dog
grooming, bothlng, oil broodo.
304~82·3730.

1149-2052.

64

AKC

Transportation

mala

AK.C Registered Golden lab

Mala, 3 Yaal'l Old $200. Needs
Place To Run 614·256-662'1 614-

'

AKC Reglstar.d mala Boston
tarrier, 1 weeks old, 614-992·

22".
AKC Aonwellar Pupplos, $300

Each, 614-446-6341.

Blchon Frln 10 Months Old
White Female Spa~!.1. Shots:
HouHbroken, Good wnh Klda,

$400, 614·368-11770.
CFA Roglstorod Hlmalyon Kittens, 814-446-1104.

Cockor Spaniol puppln, $50. no
poporo, 614·912-2830.
Flah Tank &amp; Pot Sh::l:; 2413
~~~ ~~- Point P aunt.

2

Good rabb~ dogo, aooc1 gun
Beagln tor . .11, 814-142·2834.
llolo Pot Solly pig, $50. OSO,
304-c!75-7260.
Raglatarad Engllah Setter pupe,

58

Fruits &amp;
VegeUibles

Pumpklno, Indian Com l Stolkl,
814-245-5887.
'
Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

61

Hay &amp; Grain

Squoro boloo. $1.25 to $2.00 por
bale, alfalfl, ck)var, orchard
graaa. 304-675-lgGc),

10x10x8 dog kennel, $1DI.V5.
Paint Plus, 304-GT$-4084.

Sp&lt;lngo !:'- DroNO&lt;, With
Mirror, 1500; T.. l Groen
Roell- $150, 114-44f.71128 FOSB, excaDent bloodline.
Evonlngo.
many raferencet~., brwd for tht
footf1untar, $200, a14-618-26"10.
Hummingbird Flgurlnoo And Entiro Sot lll Bradlonl Exchongo
Musical
Sorloo "Tho Booutllul Hum- 57
mlngblrda" $100, 114-441-0002.
Instruments
KILLS FlEAS! Buy ENFORCER Hall Stock Amp lloroholl Haad
Fila Kllloro lor pota, homo &amp; U.noy 4x12 Coblnot $500, &amp;14yord. GUARANTEED oHoctlvol 4411-0070 Aftor 5 P.M.
A..ltoblo at: R&amp;G FEED AND
O'DELL WilBER.
Kimball Conaole Plano, ExcelMota! dotoctor· Flohor VLF555- lent Condition, sr,ooo, 814-441·
D, 9ood condition, hea e~.rrylng 1203.
Cllt lnd NrphonH, book. . . Lowory Gonlo 44 orgon, oxcolking $150, 114-"2·2081.
lonl
ohopo, lapo ployor1
Nice Franklin Woodbumtr $150; urphonn, microphone ena
Nlco Hutch .,50; Sofl'a $50; atand, bench Hat wilt::%•
a,
Nlco Wotorllod au..n 9lzo $150; Lowory boglnnor mualc
Iota of adnnced mulk: books,
Ofllco O.N $36; Nlco Collw uklng
$1000, 814-1112~81.
Tablo. 2 End Tabloo, Bilek Rod
lrcn W~h Gloao Topo $75; All Lowrey Symphonic Holiday
Extra Nlco I 114-3711,2720.
Conooto Organ, Uka Now eon.
d~lon, 114-44f."JI4 Dayo, 814Ouoon Slu Watorbod $150, 114- 446-c!482
Alfor 1:00 P.ll.
3711-2721.
US FurnHu.... WI buy, IOU and
trada
onllquo,
now/uood
"-•hold lumllhlnga. Will buy
any amount, ..rgiTamell. IOfii
Socond St., ~1 WV. Owner·
Rocky Paoroon. ..,..77J.a341.

Club Calvn Slrod By: Jake,
AkMm, Platinum Menteedls,
Jon. And Mort. Halter Broke,
Vaccinated. Shown By A~
polnlmenl. 614-446-210t After

por lb1 _ilrm. 304-675-21102 oftor
6:00PM.

256·1353.

wlh mattreiMei room dlvklal'j
lAYNE'S FURNirURE
paid.
CornpiJt• home fumlehlnal, 11W12-al21.
3CioW7WOO:i u....apm "' 11711SiliNS: Portablo cha'tlfllblo
emaftorlpm.
0122, I ml,_ out Bulavltla Ad. algn l lotloro $21111. Frw lotion
2 lodroom llobllo Homo, Froo Dollvory.
anCI dollvory. Plllllc lollaro Ill
$250/llo. Pluo O.poolt, 1114-31~
box (-nd box hool. AAA
T
With
4
Cltolr
71102.
Nloo Condition, With 4 Choir 911[111, 1-S.345S anyllmo.
2br. mobil homo, CA, all ap- Cualtlono, $50, OBO, 114-4411- STORAGE TANKS 3•000 Gallon
pllancoo lurnloltodl lroo
2334.
Upright, Ron Evano EntoiJIIINI,
t300ilno plua ut IMiao. ~50 I ;1:;-loi-:w-:aiii:--:Winaoil::-""'·~B-ac,...kod-:--::3 Jacuan, Oltlo, t-80N37-0528.
~. 7ml. out sancitln Rd.
llilao
~ ..811-3483.
Cualtlonod
go t!OO, Uaod Sola Cllalr, 114 441 3411.
3 Bod,_, Near NOHS.
eaUO..o.
Wonn llomlng goo ,_.,,
llcCiaokoy
Rd.
Stova lllnmont Conlor 1360, 010 114- 111,1100 IJTU, ,_., vory !IIIIa, 114Ratrtaorator, Wator, Trooh PAid 448.2301.
8112·704:1.
$2711Mo Pluo Dopoolt, 814-J611.
111841.
0vor 10 PanCorpot Wo-, Dryor, Col« T.V.,
In Stoc:ll. 30 P-mo Vln_yl In lllcrowan. FrMUr, Stove,
322 Third Avanuo, No Pota, 514- !!loci!, llollohon Corpoto, Rl. 111 Rohlgorator, lilac. 114-2511-1238.
441-31118, 614-211-11103.
N., 114-441-'11144.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
Fumllhod .2 Bod- Wator, Soli I - . $200. Wllort&gt;od 200 PSI tiU5; I Inch 200 PSI
Truh Pold, Total Eloctrlc. No lramo
err.-.. $32.!!i ~~ EvaM Entolllrlooo.
814-............ Jackaon, Olllo
.
Pall, Porl•r Anoo, 114 3&amp;1-8000. 304-417M1113 aft•lpm.

14x70

_

Supplies

56

Livestock

IIams, 614·245-5096.

367·7088.
CollariD boxl 14 momory, brand
now, $43.95, oM-992-6166.

-•.304-8
.
llobllo Homo Lot For Rom, Total
Eloctrlc, 114-36~11136.

Ohio 45031, $400/Mo., O..,o.h,

Building

0041 Anor6 P.M.
Nlco 3 br. opl. In lllddloport
614-1192·5858.
'

Large

Rentals

55

AKC Registered Dalmatlon pupploo, 5wlto Old, odoroblo, $200.
304-937-2929.

46

'

Zenith console TV, living room
aulte, roll top de1k, IHHge chair,
Iota of mlac. furniture 614·992·
5310.
'

Seasoned Fl,.wood Nowl 614-

hool&lt;-upo. Colt oftor 2:00 p.m.,
304·77'3-5651, u..on WV.

couple tooklng tor
proper1y In Mlddlapon arM to
purcha11 on land contrecl,
rellrencn avalla~a. 614-1822753.

Waher/dryer at, $150; soli
defrosting refrigerator $100,
614·742·2352.
'

Nice 3 Btclroom Apar1ment, In
Point Pleasant. WV, Ratarenca
And O.po1lt Required. 11~

Aleo trlilltr space on river. .(II

Real Estate
Wanted

Merchandise

bllck Pekingese
$150, 114-"2-3506.
'

SlM!&gt;Ing Aoomo .,5 Per Doy.
nor 01 Possum Trot And ~lozor Conll.ructlon Workare Welcome,
Rood, $14,000, 114·367·78~.
EHicloncy
Kkchon,
Fr•
Tycoon Uke- one acrw lol whh Laundry, 814-388-8729.
12x60 trailer. Wlllar, elactrtc and

63

Fann Equipment

2 row Ollvor plclc0&lt;, 1 row Cooo
plckor, gravHy bod wagon, runnl~ taara, 4-8 lug alumn
whMio w/now 16" tlroo. 114-3881884.
2 two row New kiN com plckM',
narrow row, oxc conc1, 304-e75-

51150.

71

Chain s - bart l chaJno 1o I~
llm...t any oow. Boot prlcoa In
aroo. Ski- Equlprnont. 304175-"21 Of 1-600-m3117.
~ bockltoo
John ~·
•~ 4
whool - . 1C10 hp, "7~
~Ilion, Olla or - ·

WHO ELOPED
OFF WITH

1960 Mustang, 6 eyl., auto., PS,
IIC. intertor, $4200. 304-67$-

31160.
1gao lluotang 4 Cylinder, 4
Spood, _$750, 304-675-2352.
1981

111-., ,__

LivestOCk

114-81
2. 8
........
11 bla....
Halltlln
-'-- .
2 Clolod Fllltoo, 5 _ , . old. 1
lllg ......,. 114-24H087.

Chevene,

auto.

IQH&amp; Palomino Muo, 114-258-

992-7697 after Spm.

256~10!1.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST
";::

1188 Dodge 100 4 Door Auto, 4
Cyllndor 4 Now Tlroo, Auno
Good, ~olr Condition, $800,
OBO, 114-4411-2334.
18111 Olrlo DoHa 88 111,000 llllao,
114-44&amp;-12114.
1181 red Clmaro, auto, t1 ely,

r;:.

111119 Ford Tompo all whool
drlvo, PW, PL, PO, alrioond, 304175-4130.

1Nt Pontiac Lollano, 78 401
mu.. , maroon, .c ~.
lutorMIIc, llr, aw.o, llldng
$2100~14-8411-a00 daya or 114'

11411-2

ovonlngo.

exc.t61nl

-.-and-..

~[

ti~~f~~rw~:~~~~~~~~~~c~ s0p0aede~~s~~~t~~

~

qu ee n. Ea :-5 t kn e w South had s pad e
le nglh. but he was nervou s of di scard s
on dummy·, lo p ca rd s . So he ca s hed

"'&gt; ~

.•

heart overcall endin g lhe auc tion .
South see ms to have four top losers,
doesn't ht.".) Can you see an y logical
wa y I hal So uth mi g ht make hi s con
tract. give n t hat Wes t leads th e s pade
kin g'?

A

"'-

~

m
~

g

@

6

.,

1

~

and claim But
my partn er can be
persuaded lo lead a fourth spade . I
will s core th e sellin g t r ick with my

BORN LOSER
P"

,..lo.l()()(.D '{OJ MII\ID

11Jlo.l 00 I LOV£ Tl\E£ 7

Y00~ 7

· G L

X 0

GXOOXAK

G V0 XZ
UC Z XU C

M A

HTCMTCW

TXPTDWAH

AW

G N J C

5 C M

OCOM

M T C

G L

AMTCWO

X M " 0

SAHDWAH

R ATK

HXSSXNGO
PREVIOU S SOLUTION "Th ey sho ul d put exp •r at•on dat es on clothes so we
would kn ow whe n they go out of s tyl e ·· - Ga rry Sha ndltng
C&gt; 1994 by

22

NE A Inc

TIIAT DAILY
PUULII

I

SC!WHT
1

1 I ·1 I

2

1

-TC_A-rC~Y
I I I_u:.,_....jl~
I' .."',:.

II I I

I

5
16
L_.l__L_...L_.l_.JL.J

BIG NATE
tW GK"&gt;ID
" LL THOSE 1"101 HlR CUl S
lHE11 OLll
';ICKY ·
';H tc LIKE S

MY C&gt;"D DOES &gt;! r
LIKE MIY Of TH E
COMIC 'o I ll KE '

&gt;wEe&lt;

Comp le te the chu ckle quo ted
by fdlo ng on the ml !&gt;li•ng words

you d evelop tram !&gt;lep N o 3 below

AN D TAPES

COI'II c
';TRIP"&gt; I

&amp;

CJ

PRINT NUMBERE D lE TTER S IN
THESE SQUARE S

HE11 ON HER
REfRIC,tRM&lt;&gt;&lt;'

UNSCi AMBlE ABOVE lETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

'T HE'&lt; RE 50

L~ME!

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
clossifieds.

condhlon

$7500, lncludoo hhch, 61WII~
3271.
18~ O..chrnon 30' compor fully
oqulppod, IXCOIIonl condrtlon,
grNt Flortda winter home, will
dallvar, &amp;14-160-3028.
21 Ft. CcHtchmen Cempar, Good

Condhlon, Fully Contalnod,
G- For Do0&lt; Huntoro $2,850,,
114-388-11811,
'

ROBOTMAN
~

YOU'RE

StniNG
GN~Y

LUNC~ 1

0

' SH. 11-\\S? \HIS

~
t
~

SOR-RY l SEE

IS!\ HIIRP ~0\ltD I&gt;.N E~, I SIT
E&lt;:J::, rn·s fOR
ON IT IT'S A
E!\TING .NGT
HA\l\T! 1M INSrTTING!

10 NUR1"URING 1

NOI'J lHf\T YOU'VE

SilT

ON 11, l \)()t'J'T fER
L\\&lt;,E ~A111'1 6 1T

ARt YOU
OOIN&lt;O TO
f iNISH

THI'IT

SALI\P /

SO SVE ME'..

Services
Home
Improvements
BASEIIENT
WATERPROOANO
Uotoondhlonal lllwtlmo guo...,..
too. local nlonncoo lumlohod.
Coli 1~00.281-01711 Or 114-:ZU.
0481 Aogoro w...._r~ng. e.
tablllhed 1875.

ASTRO-GRAPH

C.C
Oo111ra1
Maintenance- wall~. atorm
comploto
dooro, roollng
homo ropalr, comploto
ropolr, pro-ro wllh"Jg and
mobllo homo ropolr. For no llmoto call Chit, 814-412-llll23.
Ron'a TV 8orvloo, _..,......,
In z.nbh alao - . , g ntaol ·
other brand1. HouN CIITa, IIIO
oomo appliance -n. wv
304-ll'WM Ohio 1.....2414 . .

w,_

'four
'Birthday

1r

Heating
Fraoman'a Hoati!'V And Cooling.
lnotalllllon And s.v1co EPA
Cortlllod. n.-..lal eoinmor•'•'· 114-258-1111.
'

&amp;

Refrigeration
R•ldontlal or oornmorelal '
wiring, , _ oorv1oo or ,_.,..
llallor u - 110t:1rlclan. '
Rldonour Elaclrlca! 1 wv-.

87

1

r

•

304~~1788,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Ce lebro!y Cophe r cryp!OQrams are c rea ted lrom Quolaloons bv 1amot S people p asl ;&lt;nt1 pn ls lml
Eac h letl ar on I he c ophe r sl&lt;~&lt;nds lor iln olhr&gt;r I orlily "&lt;; clut' P equa l s G

My husband had been fight·
1ng the battle of the bulge and
apparently had given up One
r--------~day I heard h1m mumble , "You
MS E E D
fan escape from almost evf,,.-,--.--r....:..-i-T--1 ryth1ng but your - -.-- - 1

19110 Compton 24' Fllh Whool,
, _ •wnlng, ~nlcrawava. etareo.,

!~··~~~:·~~~·~=~:~~==

carbon

--'--'-...1.-.J 5 1 River island

r

Motor Homes

Electrical

45 - la Douce
46 Geographical
division
47 Ms . Kelt ollho
comics
IS Chimney

lead a fourlh ' pade' Yes, of course.
It's in all th e books .··
At which point West di scarded the

::-::-c--=-:---:--=--- - ·

Plumbing

43Take - view
44 - 11
Shocking?

heart queen. How can I get partner to

C.OONTII-IG TO

1887 Dodge Omnllor porto. 304-;

837-2281 or 837-338t,

82

of nine
---~--f---t--~ 42 Phoned

thing like 4·8·0· 1 di s tnbution ' If my

..

and

one
35Ships
360eer meat
38Free (oil
. 39Hurry
f--+f--~-1 41 Musical group

diamond ace.

2679.

81

Loretta 32 Bothersome

"What. " Wes l wa s wondering . "if

1iUI5 3.8 lhre V-8 perta; 1l10'
want to buy minibike·, 814-G92·

excellent

29 - of the
above
30Actress

South has a diamond void and some ·

partner
switches
dia draw
mond trump
at tricks
r. decla
re r will ruff.
l----====~~~~5~=:::5~~=:::===='~~=~~~~~~!~~~~::;::.______jJ fou
if

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories

axtrae.

281ndividuals

Ihe spade a{·e . He was about to re turn

0

Q

1985 Glassport 17ft. open bow,
2.!L lnboorGioutboord, lull topo, ;
III•J•cket•, •qulpment, 11c. •

campers

24 Fruit skin
26Fallure
27 River nymph

a diamond . but West was thinking

l oa

12 fl. Aluminum Boat &amp; Trailer
Mlnnkola Trolling Molar; 14 Ft....
Flberglaae Boat, Mlnnkote TroU· ·
lng lfotor 614-245-5628.

~,l:':M0~0::,MJ';,j.~~~ 84
72 Trucks for Sale

WIN~!)

.1!·.

Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

uklng S1500, 114-1142·3172 or
114-441·1138.
Travel lrallor, Torry AaiOII, 22',
1887 eo ..,,.,, s1100. 304-1185- lllf.contalnad, air, IIMpa 7. u31142 Of 119.34211.
collont condhlon, 16,1100 1147117-2281.
•
11188 Fonl Taunro. $2,100 Coli
114-44&amp;-711011 jO.ytlmol Or 114- Wlnnebllgo Motor Home1 614248-15628.
~32&amp;
11111 ~h Rolllltl, ~r.,
2100ml., $4500 ftrm. ~7540JCI or 175-4211 aft• 5prn.
11111 T-blnl, low mi._, loodod
ohapo. S04-11711-30419 alta;

(ylrNt:,

··

79

1988 Buick Grond National,
Loadodl bcollont Cond~lonl
Low llllal, 814-4411-4811.
19111 Cllov. Euro Sport, ~r.,
$1400, oloan. 30«75-2192.

TIPPII'I~

m

~ ~

Timborwoll,

loodod. 30W75-2432.

llcyl., l:l,500ml., good cond.,

NO

A/:5

CAFf

$3,200. axe cond, 304-195-3996.

1888 ehrYalar Now Yorkaf, 2.2L,

875-2352.

a!.

:

Budaot Prlcod Tranomlaalono:
Uaocl I rwbul~, 111 typoo, lllrl·
lng at $60j owner OJ4.24S..5177,
614-379-21135, 614-37V-2263.
New gu tanka, one ton truck·
whaela ndlatora floor mata,
otc. D il A A~(ploy WV. 304372-3833 or I
:tn:'m.
.

1184 Monte Carlo Auto, 350 Eft.

23Actress Carter

lr ee
10Paradi se

25Toward
shelter

Hr s hand ha rdly looked so rt a ble for
on e no -trump . He wa s n · l n e a rly

South brd t he full valu e of his hand

11 Elec . unit
19Milwaukee' s

st.
21 Ethiopian title

di ges ting

9 Evergreen

his partne r's on e-diamond openin g

land mo re . some would say) , his ·four -

614-742·2457 '

76

Na sta se
4 TV seri al
5 Fic tion al
elephant
6 Paris ai rpo rt

I A

one spade: as would many. l suspect.

Motorcycles

1\183 Sulek Par11 Avenue, 51,000

37Sadden
39 Change the

-

East had a n awkward decision ove r ll..,..-+--+-

'(Ol! I-1AD
QUICK 11AND5 ..

1982 Yamaha Maxim 550 $1,000 :
080 614-388-1770.
t

75

vidi vici

7 - de Janeiro
8 Fit tor

3 Tenni s pl ayer

Pass Pas~
l'ass
O p e n rn g lead : "K

di a mond s on lhrec to th e e ight wa s
unappelrzing at be s t So he se lected

18~
Aotro Elttondod
Loadodl 64-4411-12114.
88 Ford F250, 4x4, 614-m-75!51

Yamaha

36 -

st rong enough for two clubs. And two

1985 S·10 4x4 V-6, 4 Spood;
53,500. 614-446~958.

cond., $5000. 304-875-5815.

!"'•
New Tl,.l, I WhMII,
ood Condition, 53.5QO, 304-

TR'i' IT OUT ..

=---=::::-:--::-::-:--:-:c--:&gt;

19114

minute!

34New (prel.)
35 Bridal attir e

or wise'?

r nouG~n

.

1982 Quantum Yolkawogon 5300
Naodo, Somo Worll 114.258-11143.
1111•. A·1 Cond~lon, 114-24&amp;5828.
1883llollbu Wogon v~ With Air
High Mllaa, Will llalnlalnod:
$1100; Yomaho 100 CC Racing
Go eon tl,200; tm Chevy C.10
Sllvoratlo, 53,800.114-379-27'16.
1883 Mercury Coprl jl.ooka Uka
lluatangl 4 Cyl., Auto, $1,385,
114 441 0440,114-2~8.

SORR'{. SIR ..

WELL , LET'S 60

191n Ford Van I Cylinder. PB.,
PS, Auto, Cruloo, Good Condl·
1!011, S1,700 090 Or Trodo F0«
Pick-Up, 514-446-81126, Or 614-&lt;
446-7153.
'

nlldl

motor, good body, $125, 814-0854235.
1981 Malibu Clooolc Slltlon
Wagon, 268 Engine, Good Condn!On,
$1,000'.
Couch &amp;
Lo-11, Morvin Hotloy, 114-

11-10 pickup, .......
3 llayr. old gokllng, gontlo, ·
boaortt
- 11711··
~ · :;:r._:....or
. --··
••-·
-'ll'r.rso
4838.
30Wll-1lll.
·
- · aorodo •ddlo. " " 1 Yoor Old , . _ , _ 11aro sa
1""'- Tall .JI)O, 814-m-'iiill.

M'{ DAD BOUGHT
ME A NEW BALL.

1880 J11p CherokMI full 1lz•
IIIWO, 4 epeed, I c:yl nd~tr, new'
tlrea, run• great, good gaa'
mllRge, $2500 or might take,
lata 70'• ..,.,. eo·a 314 fon 4WD
automatic truck on trade, 614-·

111111,

(2 wds.)
56 UK time
57 Photoco py
Vou ·re You ?
22Title of respe ct 58 Tid y
23 Pistons · o rg .
DOWN
24 Floats
27Wrestling ho lds
31 Badly
1 - voce
32Wan
2 Re mark a ble
33 Right th is
person (st. )

pie who know j us t a little bil too mu ch lb.,-t--+fu r t heir own good . On today's de a l. do
yo u lhink Eas t an d Wes t we re cleve r 11..~+--+­

PEANUTS

or mlgfit take late 70'• Nrty &amp;O'e
314 ton 4WO eutoma11c truck on
trade, 614-tKI2·78W after 5 pm. '

Evanlnga.

54 Citru s fru it
55 Aw are ol

17Mesh

Em il No ld e . the (;er ma n p11i nt c r .
said . "Clever people mast er life. the
wise illuminate it and crc&lt;Jt c fresh difficulties.·· True; there arc certain per ·

1117V GIIC :114 Ton Truck, 4 WD,
Auno Good, S1,60D, 614-4411-1506.
1880 JeaJ) Cherok11 lull ...lza, 4apaad, 8 cyl, new Urn, run•
groot, good goo mi!Ngo, $2500

15.259

'87 Camero, V-6 with Hope,
auto.• 614-84f.2126.

52 Hern ando De 16 Soak up the ink 53 Author An a is -

ll y Phillip .'\ld e r

W82 V4!5 Honda 750 Motorcycle, •

5498.

49 Co mmerc ials

50 Mer it

He has read
all the books

WALDO!!

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

74
:;::-::--::-----::--,--,=--'72 Yolkawogon Boltlo, 614-1192·

1!18:J Eaala '!:,~automatic, air
kin, fOlded'
201*,1100 .,,._, - ,._:
lla
- · - •-..·'. ~--11M Dotl[lo lito- E8 Torq
Bluo 8,100 Ill._, Auto, ~Tilt, Air, S11,1100, 114-446-7337. '
3br., 2 bollt, largo living • flrnlly
21
88 Whh Buoh 112ac:. ..S,OOO llrm. 304·7n!:fog • Bladi $3,850; 38 " ' - IIIII.
Forg_, Now lkl4or l Palnf.
13,550; 20 For- With WNto Unooln Town Cor 1IMII
. . _ , 12,550, 114'2111-11122.
~I A-le. Loatltl;
Soato, E-lan! Condftlon, 1

11:114.

GLORY BE ! ! LOOK

I COME TO
SEE JUGHA ID
FLY HIS NEW
KITE!!

I.

51100 Fonl Troctor With Hoavy 1U~ Plymouth La- Excollonl
Duly Buah Hog $1,5110; :1020 Condl!On, $5,750, 114-446-31117.
John Dooro, Super Sharp, 11112 8 ~ a-~
17,360, IOIInlornolfonal 53,11111;
• - ....,.., loodod, 114&amp;14-21111-8522.
992-15137.

63

4"

Pick-Up Parle From Southwoot
Chov &amp; Fonl Bodo, Chov Cobo,
Rongor Shorlbod, 73 .ao en..
a· 814-44&amp;-0440, 114-_,B.

Autos for Sale

Pa ~s

I t

BARNEY

256~018.

Miscellaneous

t 8f)2
•J Y7 H l 2

B 3

devotee
421n vade s
45 Electrili es

Vuln e r a i.Jie Ne iih c r
Dea le r : We s t
South
Wrs t Norlh Eas t

Ford

8()..86

., ,

..

lonawldo, 814-446&lt;1440, 814-

0 19\Mby"'EA lr.r

304·773-50711.
Buy Your Winter Supply Of

4 Acrn Oft Addlaon Pika Cor·

14112

lhll MWipef*' II JUbtld Ia

oolgln,

Utllltl•

Apertmenls In Middleport. From

==

OTA DfiYIIn, AJI .._ Equipmont. lluol Hno CDL'o And 3
Y•r• Experlanc~~. 814-286--6484

Wontod Plano Tachor lor
lloglnnoro
lntom.dlatoo
Studonto.Sot yw"ro own houn.
Sorld Rooumo to Studio E.
llualc, 7'11 E. Stato Stroot,

$260/Uo.

2-3 Bedroom

3 a.drooma, 2 Bathe, Heat

614-446-~~ Daye. 814-446-6452

Conc:noto &amp; Plllllc Soptlc
300 TIIN 2,000 Gallono
lloblla Homo: 19111 All Eloctric 3 Nor!h 4th A..., lllddt-" Oh, TonkaE
Ron vano Entorprlooo, Jack·
B.droome, W11her, Dryer, Un·
2br. 1\Jmlohod opt., dopoltt &amp; son, OH t-301).53M529.
derplnnlng, Deck Incl. Good rolaronc:oo. 304-882-2568.
h;;:-'-.,-.:.:.:..:c.:.::..=:__-Prlco, 614-'J67-0688.
Unlurnlehad 3 Bedroom ~rt- 2E lander wood
coalltova,
_ ,andbrick
!!nod,
Mobile Home 1990 Redman
mant, Located On Second oor,
one winter, ih4.gg2-5258.
14x70 2 Bedroome, 2 Batha, Ap- Over Holzer Cllnle, Jacbon
pllancoa, 814-25U054 Anor Avenue, Point Plauant, 304- Female Shih-tzu. Gravt~ly tractor
5:00 P.ll. l14-258-8028.
675-44118.
&amp; mowar. 22 2llh12. S5oo. 40gol
g11 Wlllt heater. 8fl. aluminum
33 Fanns for Sale
Unlurnllhod 3 Rooma &amp; Bath, 6rako. Ook trim. ~75-4004.
Upatelra, Wet« Peld, No Peta,
24.311c.1 2br. older house, ~ Codor 814-3811-8000.
FLEAS? ENFORCER OVERNITE
FLEA TRAP conlrolo llo11
unflnlaned
log
house
whhout lnHCtk:ldea, and h'a
wlbiNmtn1 &amp; septic system, 45
Furnished
GUARANTEED! Avalloblo ot:
county water, pond, barn, outVALLEY WilBER AND R&amp;G
building, Bothol Rood, $70,000.
Rooms
FEED.
304~7S-4276 or675-7853.
Room1 for rant ·week or monlh.
SJ:~':7 ot $120/mo. Galllo Hotel. Oae floor furnllce, 1111 or t,.da,
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
614-8411-301\
8
15110.

Young

Eltporlonced

Bedroom,

Shoitwlde,

EI\ST
AA Q 7

A I 0 ') :l ~ :1
¥ A K .J I U R :1 2
+ 10

en.v • Fonl Bodo, ehov Cobo,
Ronger Shottbod, 73-80 Chov

54

12 Not outwardly

41 Relig ious

opening
20 - You Glad

SOUT H

Pick-Up Parte From SouthwMt

lion

Paid, 614-448-4416 After 7 P.M.
54 Miscellaneous
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Me ha dl
BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON '-;;;;;-;:;;:;;-;;:;:-rc~":'n=--98---::=:
ESTATES, 536 Jockaon Pika ltoo,OOO 1JTU Qu F u - 112%
from $222 to $285. Wolk to ohop EHiclonc~SO% EH!cloncy, 1·
4 movlea. C.ll 614-446-2568. __.,..,.
1
EOH.
~··
, 14-441-4308.
11170 Edlllon WOflcl Booka $50·
Cloan oHioncy opt, rol &amp; dop ro- WOflcl Yoor Boolca 1m -c!2 $25·l'
qulred, no pets, 304-f7S..5162.
Wot1d Scianca Book Annue
Fumlahod 3 Roomo &amp; Bath, 11172 To 82 $25; Or All For $100.
Cloon, No Poto Reference &amp; Colloo Toblo 2 End Tablao $15
O.posh Roqulroa.1 614-4411-1518.
Each 0t All 3 For $40; Box Fon
SIO; Syrooo lluolc Ptoquo $20;
Gracloua living. 1 ond 2 bed- Dual Buoter PJoctlcolly Now $10;
room apartmanta at Vllla9• Wrought Iron FlowM Stand $10i
Menor
ond
Rlvoral o Clothoo, sno., P..--, Choopl

Fumlahod

2 Bedrooms, 12»65 $6,500, 614·

Real Estate

Gall poll•, UH 45631.

lion -Frt.

446-6857.
1981 14x56 Skyline 2 Bedrooms,
Gaa HHt, New C.rpat, Excellent
Cond~lon, $7.850, 614-4~175.

PJoloUtonol T100 Sorvlco Topping i Trimming Hodge T~m·

Good Aet.rencaa, 814-367-70A8.

Sun

AU arNsl AVON Chrlstmae Mil·
lng otorll, Nm big $$$. Marilyn

14x70 Nahsua Mobile Home
Central Air, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Excellent Condition, 614-

1982 Challenger 14r70 Haa Two

tlmot•l 814-381HI843, 614-367·
Shl~oy

14x50 1982 Ook Brook lloblto
Home, 2 B.drooms, Wuhar,
Dryer, Underpinning, And 2
Deck• Included. Anum• Loan,
614-4«-4504.

..-!ng For U.nd To Tlmbor.
Coli Ua, We'll Do You Right!

mfng Stump Aamoval FrM Es-

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes
for sale

Chlldct~ra, r.glltwedlllnk. ba:st

0138.

With Or WllhoUI Motors. Call

5 pm.

939

•Q

1912 Sllvorodo pickup, block
Wlallver bonom panel, topper,
exc. conct 304-i82..:J221.
18M Toyota 4xlll, 11c. cond. 304675-6810.

Houro Mon . • Sot . !HI Woe!. tH·
Don't Forget Our REPO . Sec~

Fumlahlld

AIIIFII c:auotto, 52ti0(). ~75-

71130.

Chevy C-10 ohortbod

18110 Fonl Ranger XLT, 4 Cvlln·
dor, AIAomlllc, Alklng: $4,1100.
614-448-6958.

Waahera /Dryera

Second Avenue, Galllpolla, 1 Attar 5:00 P.M.

14 2

Apar1m•nt,

0

Oualfty Hou..hotd Fumllhlngs
And Appllanc•. Matt,. .. Seta •
$6.00; tNnattn • 1149.00;
Uvlng Room St. • $2VS.OO; Bad1oom1
St.
$375.00;
Aetrtgaretora • Rlngea

water, road frontage on two
qu 1•!.f o~~try ll~lng, 45+

0

• Mil.. Out Rt. 141
614-446-3158

sides,

12,000 IICt~l mllae, PS, PB, AC:

19114 Cho"? 70 So~ 2 Ton
Dump Truck, 10 Ft. Dump, Excetlanl Condition, 114-256-&amp;IIIS.
11184 Fonl F-250 U A&amp;rtomotlc,
Wllh DNE ~ OVorclriVI, 114,000
1111•, 614-4411-10711.

VI'RA FURNITURE

H
Rd
Fumlshad EHiclency, 701 Fourth Whirlpool HNvy Duty Waaher
rn
ol 1ow
·• Rutland, 3-4 Avenue, Galllpolla, $185/Mo. And Dryer, $275 For B"oth. Alao
bedroom, modern kitchen, oak UIIIHI
p ld Sh
W~rl Aarrln--tor With'
cabinets, Jann Alre cooktop,
II
• '
are Bath,614a
·-·
12x24 oak deck on front, LCCD 1=
446
_ -4,_41,..6_A_ n_or...,..7_P_.II_ .____ $200.
T
Acc:aa lea
Maker,
All Eltcotlant
Condition

18
:=:--::-:---_:,.::_.:..:...::..:_
__ 32

marbl11, ltonewal"', magazlnea,

Second Ave ..!. Gallipolis, 614-44&amp;4418 After 7 t'.M .

0

Tandy 1000EX Computw With
Printer, Dllk And Software,
1650, 114-441-1203.

Co

wookdoyo.

Old cigarette llghtere, milk bot·
tin, fountain pans, silverware,

Womod To Buy: J..,k Autos

Homes for Sale

acrH, 8 ·•• -v.J72 aner

carlll baC rat•. 304-4575-286V.
Exporloncod Gultorlot Now
Giving Laaone In Thera Home.
For llore lnlormaUon, 114-441·

Star Wars and Star Trek hams;
O.by Martin, 614-992·"X41.

31

Insurance

Appliances,

~•Jor

T.V. sL

13

Furnished Efficiency $150/Mo.
lhllnln Paid, Shora Both, 607

5 4
• K 7 3
• A K I0 5

AK B
¥Q 0
• i\ Q J 9j 4

1982

lumHura, hu.tllre, WMtam &amp;
Work boota. 114-448-3'158.

5 Make weary
9 Chu rch seat

18Basement

. I)

EEK&amp; MEEK

7tiV7 a~ar 5pm.

6347.

2bdnn. ap1s., total electric, 1ppllanclt tumlshad,
laundry
room laciUII•s, cloae to school
In town . Application• evellabla
at: VIllage GrHn Apta. 149 or
call 614·992 -3711. EOJ.t.

• J G2

1tlll4 broad truc:k, nony dutr,
480 auto, dual whMia, decent
on gu, $1400 OBO, 614-992·

Sola And Lov-t Entonalnm•nt Canter, Butch ~lock Tibia,

$200/Mo. All lhllltloo lncludod,
Betwaan
9:30
-5:00.

304-895-3430 .

!.1 22·9&lt;1

11117 El Comlno, V-II outo, block

814-44S.m3,

1\uc tlonoer Cot Osur E. Click,
license I 7S4-94 &amp; Bo nded,

Sale

Trucks for

odh outlaw mago SI&amp;OO 080;

auction
se rvice.
Uc ensed
t66,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304-

lull lime auctioneer, comj:llete

72

Computer O..k, 014-441-1203.

1 Bedroom Close To Unlverstly
Of Rio Grande, $200/Mo. Plul

Public Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Household

An swer to Previou s Puule

(sull.)

(,1 Ca ncel

13 Diva's song
14Mountain on
Crete
15 Ore depo si1

Goods

1 and 2 bedroom apartment•,
fumlahld
and untumlshad,
Heurlty deposit requlr.d, na

wuhfi, dryer,
dl•hwa.tter,
M etric lypiwrltar, antlqun, n ·
.,cl..,, mlac.

B

5I

Apartment
for Rent

clock
40 Adherent o f

I I

Upholstery

-roy·a Uphoiotary, A- WJ1. '
llamoon, OwMr. lotvl!tg ,,.,
-far .ov•2V YNro llio' llmatoo. 304-m-41$4. '

Friday, Sept. 23. 1994
Your chart indicates you might become
involved in larger enterprises or endeav·

ors than you have been in !he past. One
of your ven!Ures may be !he biggesllhing
you've everlackled:
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Acknowledge
and reward the deserving loday, but don't
feel under obligation to do lhe same lor
· persons \'.'hO have not earned this !real·
ment. Gel a jump on l~e by undersland·
ing lhll, inlluences which are governrng
you in lhe year ahead. Send lor your
Astro·Graph predictions today by marlrng

"

$1 .2 5 lo Astro-Graph. c/o lhrs newspa - .mpul s tvEin ess ov e rrule yo ur logt c JU S!
per . P 0 . Box 4465. New York . N Y becau se you seek qutcker an swers .
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 Sllualrons
10163. Be sure to stale your zodiac sign .
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 221 Associales lhat require collect tv e actt o n mtght nol
could be a 1nlle diHicull lo gel along wrlh work favorab ly lor you today. The probtoday. You m1ght find it necessary to pia· lem may not ortg~nate wtth you , but wtth
cate or appease them, even when you your assoctates.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Take care ol
know your position is nght.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 S!rive cri tical deve lopments as l hey oc c ur
to be sensible about health matters loday today , because Ihey could worsen ove r
and make moderation your byword . If time . The one th1ng you don't want to do
there are things you shouldn't eat or rs lei mrngs pile up on you .
CANCER (June 21·July 221 Sell ·
drink. lind comparable substitutes.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan. 191 Don'! ' approval is of greater importance to you
get caught in a petly political situation loday than acknowledgment by others .
today with friends . You might find your· Don't let your peers pressure you into
sell forced to side with one pal against doing things against your better judg another.
ment .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) Be diplo· LEO (July 23-Aug. 2211n challenging sil·
malic and tacUulloday il you have to deal ualions . guard against inclinations to
with individuals in authorily, especiall y underrate your adversaries. Your compepersons who could hurt or impede your lition could be tougher !han you think
today.
career.
PISCES (Feb. 211-.Morch 20) This is no! a VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Even though
good day lo inlroduce issues or subjects you might believe your way ol dorng
into discussions where others hold strong things is superior loday , don '1 !ry 10
views thai diametrically oppose your own. · impose your prr cedures on o1hers. Some
type•of serious misunderstanding could
Sparl&lt;s are likely .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Be exira result.
()11191 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
careful today and tomorrow in your busi·
ness or financial affairs. Don't let your

•

'•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
9-21-9 4
Rector· Grant· Vault· Peaked- NEAR the PLACE
A not so smart chap told the employment agency that
he had a JOb once . "I worked at a fire hydrant plant" he
'-· said, "but I had to qu1t I couldn't park anywhere NEAR
the PLACE."

'

�Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 22, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,

WVU grid
team loses
by 34-6 score

Pick 3:
142
Pick 4:
3244
Super Lotto:
10-18-24-35-37

Page4
..

_

Low IOnlghtln 50s, p&gt;rtty
cloudy.

Saturd&lt;.~~' 1 r&lt;.~in. Hi~h

In

mid-70s .

_._._.,._,.._

•

I

en tine

YOU SEE THE FACTORY INVOICE
NOT ALIMITED OFFER IN STOCK OR
FACTORY ORDER

With Factory Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
Less Than Factory
Invoice on Most
•
Models.

I

Vol. 45, NO. 100
Copyright 11194

Ex-investigator indicted
Wolfe faces
abduction,
aggravated
menacing
charges
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A fonner Meigs County deputy
who was also a special investigator
for the Meigs County Prosecutor's
office was indicted Thursday on
two felony and two misdemeanor
counts.
Gary J. Wolfe, Racine, was
indicted on two charges each of
abduction and agwavated menac-

()

ing by a Meigs County grand Jury
summoned by special prosecutor
Rocky Coss.
According to lite Ohio Rev ise d
Code, abduc tion is defin ed as
removing anot.h cr from where he is

found. or res training anoU1cr of hi s
liberty. under circumstances whi ch
crC&lt;lte a risk of physical hann to the
vi ctim , or place him in fear, by
force or threat.
The indi ctm ent s stem from a
Jan . 22 in cident during which
Wolfe allegedly pointed a handgun
at his form er wife, Sonya Wolfe,
and Harry Lyons Jr. , both of
Racine.
The mcident allegedly occurred
in Sonya's Kountry Kitch en in
Racine while the restaurant was
closed for storm-rela ted rcpa~rs.
The Wolfes were both part-owners
in the restaurant, which is now
under different ownership.

'

0~
1994 CHEVY LUMINA
EURO 2 DR.
V-6 , auto, A/C, AM/FM Cass,
. tilt , cru ise PS, PB, PW, PL,
More
$13,949

4 cyl, auto, air cond ., PS, PB,
lilt, cruise, AM/FM stereo

1993 FORD MUSTANG
CONVERTIBLE
4 cyl, auto, A/C, tilt, cruise,
PS. PB. PW, PL, AM/FM

1993 FORD ESCORT
STATION WAGON
4 cyl, auto, air cond., PS, PB,
AM/FM cass., More

$13,449

6,000 Mi les

$10,949

$10,249

•

0*
A. P.R.

0

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
V-6, auto, climate control, ti lt,
cruise, AM/FM Cass., P.S., P.B.,
P.W., P.L. , leather power seats. ·
dual air bags.
More

24949

1994 MERCURY
SABLE
1994 FORD F150 MARK Ill CONVERSION TRK
5.0 L V-8. auto. A/C, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass., P.S., P.B.,
P.W . PL . Power sliding back glass. ONLY 5,000 mi.
1993 FORD TAURUS
4 dr, V-6 , auto, atr cond.,
AM/FM cass. , tilt, cruise, PS,
PB. PW. PL. P seasH,~..f8

V-8, auto, A/C. AM/FM cass.,
tilt, cruise, PS, PB. PW, PL,
leather, P. seat

4 dr, 6 cyl, auto, A/C, tilt, cruise,
P.S., P.B. , P.W. , P.L, Pwr seat,
air bags. etc.
Several to
$15,449

1993 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA LX SEDAN
V-8, auto, climate control, air,
leather, all pwr, tilt, cruise,
etc.
$15,949
1991 MERCURY
GRAN MARQUIS
V-8, auto, air cond., AM/FM
cass , P.S , P.B., P.W., P.L.,
tilt, cruise, Pwr s~,t !2W§h
more
:,. 0 ,

1992 MERCURY COUGAR

1992 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM

6 cyl, auto , A/C, AM/FM
cass. , tilt, curise. PS, PB,
PW, PL, Pwr seat ~~ ,

4 cyl, auto, air cond., P.S.,
P.B.. tilt &amp; cruise, AM/FM
stereo. more

0 249

1994 MERCURY
COUGARXR7
V-8, auto, Air control, AM/FM
cass, P.S, P.B. P.W., PL. Pwr
seat, ttlt, crUise, Traction Assist.
Much More

Fixed rate financing with
approved credit on all 93
&amp; 94 pre-owned &amp; factory
program cars &amp; trucks
Terms to 60 months.

1993 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
SIGNATURE SERIES
V-6, auto, climate control, tilt,
crUise, P.S., P.B., P.W., P.L.,
power seats, leather, gold pkg.
Super Clean

USED CARS AND TRUCKS

1993 FORO F150 4X2
"LIGHTNING"
351 H.D, V-8, auto, A/C, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass. P.S.,
P.B., P.W. P. L. 17" .

1993 FORD AEROSTAR
VAN
6 cyl, auto. front &amp; rear A/C.
P.S . P.B., tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cass, 7 passenger $ ,
14 949

1993 FORD EXPLORER
4X4, Sport Package, 4.0 L,
V-6, 5 spd, A/C, P.S , P B.,
P.W., P.L., tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cass. MORE

1993 FORD RANGER XLT
SUPERCAB
V-6, 5 spd, A/C. P.S., P.B.,
tilt. cruise, AM/FM cass.
More. ONLY 15,~9f,~

By ,nM FREEMAN
SentiDetNews Staff
With the automobile being an
everyday part of American life, it is
hardly surprising that many Amencans choose to drive to their vaca-

tion destinations instead of nying
or Ulk.ing a bus.
However, unlike most Americans, Erwin Anderegg of Fredericksburg, Texas, and his companion, Wilbur Hubner of Dallas,
chose 10 drive a pair of 1924 Model
T Fords, from Texas to Meigs
County.
Anderegg and Hubner and their
wives, Bobby and Cubby, respectiv ely, paused in Meigs Co un ty
Thursday to visit Anderegg's sister,
Vera Crow, who lives in Pomeroy.
Anderegg said a trip of such
length would have been very diffi-

$23,949

One
1994 FORD
TAURUS
6 cyl, auto, A/C., ttlt, cruise,
P.S, P.B , P.W., P.L., Pwr seat,
air bags .
Much More

1994 LINCOLN TOWN CAR SIGNATURE
V-8, auto, climate control, tilt, cruise, AM/FM Cass., All

TEXAS T -Erwin Anderegg, shown here with his sister, Vera
Crow of Pomeroy, drove this 1924 Model T Ford from Texas to
Meigs County. Anderegg's father, Dan, purchased the car new in
1924. Accompanying Anderegg is wire, Bobby, lcrt, and Wilbur
and Cubby Hubner of Dallas, not shown.

nations benefit junior high

cult to complete in 1924.
Flats would have been a problem, he said. "The tires and tubes
were bad and the road s were
rough."

A bad starter was the only
mishap this trip, said Anderegg. A
ca ll to a local Model T club
resolved the problem.
"I have a lot of confidence in the
cars," he said. "We drive safely."
Turn signals and stop lights
were added to th e old cars as a
safety measure, he said. The cars
also carry CB radios for communication.
Other additions to Anderegg' s
car include a 12-volt electrical system with an alternator instead of
the original generator and an
upgraded ignition system.
Anderegg's vehicle, a 1924
Ford Model T Touring purchased
by his father, Dan, in 1924, has a
24-horsepower four-cylinder
engine, a two-speed transmission
and an optional Ruckstul two-speed
rear end. The whole vehicle sits
a10p skinny, 30-by-3-1/2-inch tires.
Anderegg said his car got about
20 miles-per-gallon at an average
speed around 38-40 miles-per-hour.
The two cars will stay in Meigs
County while the group continues
its trip up into Canada, Niagara
Falls, across the St. Lawrence
River into Maine and down the east
coast Picking up the Model Ts on
the way home, they plan on driving
along the Blue Ridge Parkway.
"Most people are nice," he said
as far as sharing the road with
modern vehicles is concerned .
"Especially the uuckers. People in
cars don 't want to share tile road ."

Meigs Junior High School
recently received donations
from Pepsi and Vaughan 's
Cardinal. Above, Pepsi donated two scoreboards for the
junior high. From left arc
Henry Thrapp of Pepsi, eighth
grade football coach Don
Dixon, junior high basketball
coach Ron Drexler and teachers Christine Blaellnar and
.Jesse Vail. Vail and Blaettnar
teach the Occupational Work
Adjustment classes. About a
dozen students will be respon sible ror keeping the vending
machines stocked, while learning about work and responsibility. At right, Don Vaughan
of Vaughan's Ca rdinal and
math teacher Linda Lear pose
in front or computers and calculators the supermarket
donated. The computers will
likely be used in the library
for word processing purposes.
(Sentinel photos by Dave Harris)

DEP reopens comment period
for pulp mill in Mason County
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-The state Division of Environmental Protection is reopening for
30 days the public comment period
on a proposed pulp mill beside the
Ohio River in Mason County.
Director David Ca llaghan said
Thursday he decided to accept
additional comment after the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
complained about changes made in
the final version of tile miWs water

$14,949

1993 FORD T-BIRD
2 dr, V-6, auto, A/C , AM/FM
, P.S., P.B., P.W., P.L., Pwr
tilt. cruise.

MUCH
MORE

$16,449

$13,449

1994 MERCURY
TOPAZ

1994 FORD TEMPO

dr, 4 cyl, auto, A/C, P.S , P.B.,
, P.L. , tilt, cruise, AM/FM

4 dr, 4 cyl, auto, A/C, P.S., P.B.,
P.W., P.L., tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cass. Pwr. seat.

1993 FORD F150
1994 FORD
LONGBEO
RANGERXLT
4 cyl, 5 spd, air cond., P.S., 4.9L, tLcyl, 5 spd, P.S., P.B.,
P.B., AM/FM cass, Sl. back · AM/FM stereo, More,
ONLY 9,000 miles $ ,
glass, chrome-whet~o.
11 949

949

1991 FORD AEROSTAR
1992 FORO F150
4 WHEEL DRIVE
4X4, Extended Length, Ed•die I
4.9 L, 6 cyl, auto, P.S., P.B.,
Bauer, 4.0 L, 6 cyt, auto, dual
AM/FM cass, long bed,
air, AM/FM cass. '1~!!~4 9
·
bedliner. New tires$ ,
13 949
1989 FORO E-150
CONVERSION
Raised roof, TV, VCR, V-8,
auto, A/C, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cass. All po~w,

949

MERCURY
LINCOLN

:=======IL
l
1988 FORD AEROSTAR
Eddie Bauer Edition
6 cyl, auto. front &amp; rear air
P.S., P.B., P.W., PL.,
cruise, AM/FM cast7,
249

Voinovich,
Hollister plan
stops in area
Gov. George Voinovich, his
running mate, Nancy Hollister,
and their spouses will be making several stops in the area on
Saturday, the Voinovich campaign organization announced.
The governor and his
entourage are to be at the
Pomeroy Gun Club at 12:30
p.m. to meet with members of
the Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council and discuss area transponation issues.
The group will travel 10 the
Gen. James M. Gavin power
plant in Cheshire for a tour at
I :45 p.m., followed by a trip
downriver to Gallipolis on the
towboat J.S. Lewis.
The group will arrive at the
Gallipolis landing at approximately 4:30 p.m. and tour the
Our House Museum, 434 First
Ave. Voinovich and Hollister
will then present brief remarks
to a Republican dinner and rally
at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds around 6 p.m. The
group is scheduled 10 leave for
the Jackson Apple Festival at
6:30 p.nl.

AMultimedia Inc. N-opaper

Wolfe was at the tim e emp loyed
by Meigs Cou nt y Prosec utin g
Atlo rn ey John R. Lcntcs as an
investigaiOr, and he was also a special deputy for Meigs Sheriff Jmnes
M. Sou lsby. He was earlier di smi ssed by the prosecutor's offi ce
and resigned hi s deputy's comm ission Thursday before the indictment.
Abduction, an aggravated felony
of the third degree, is punishable
by a maximum prison tenn of five
to 10 years. Aggravated menacing
is a fust-degrcc misdemeanor punIShable by a six-month jail tenn. In
addition, Wolfe may face an ,additional three yea rs co nfinement
since the indicuncnt states a handgun was used in the alleged offenses.
An arraignment has been set for
10 a.m. Tu es day in the Me igs
County Court of Common Pleas.

Texas couples make stop
in area
thanks to Model T
Henry Ford's
popular car
can still make
lengthy trips

1 Section, 10 Pageo 35 conb

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 23, 1994

pollution perm it
Peter Kostmayer, director of the
EPA regio nal office in Philadel phia, co mplained la st week that
Callaghan's agency increased with out public comment the amount of
dioxin the mill would be allowed to
di scharge into the Ohio.
Dioxin is a toxic byproduct of
paper biC&lt;lching. The draft version
of the permit called for a discharge
limi t of one pound every 100,000

years, but that was changed to one
pound eve ry I0,000 years in the

final version.

Kostmayer said making that
chan ge without public comment
co uld Invalidate the permit. But
Callaghan sa id his agency will simpl y take co mm ent and dec id e
whether to mc&gt;dify the pcm1it.
The $ 1.1 billion mill at Apple
Grove would be bullt by a subsidi ary of Parsons &amp; Whillemorc
Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y.

National program brings
homeless back to polls
cities included Canton, Columbus,
Steubenville and Toledo.
"The campaign is about giving
homeless people a sense of their
citizenship ... by giving them a
voice in policy issues," said Fred
Kamas Jr .. executive director of the
coalition.
In Cincinnati, deputy registrars
up tables at several soup
set
ends meet.''
kitchens
and shelters in addition to
She had never even bothered to
Wasliington
Parle. .
register to vote, until advocates for
About
45
people had registered
the homeless made it easy.
All she had to do on Thursday to vote in Cincinnati by midday
was walk across the street from the Thursday, said Katy Heins, execushelter where she is staying to tive director of the Contact Center,
Washington Parle, a half-mile north an advocacy group that helped
of downtown. 'There, a deputy reg- organize the local voter drive.
Some homeless people don't
istrar passed out voter registration
vote
because they think politicians
cards as part of National Homeless
don't
care about them, said Lynn
Voter Registration Day.
Dinnen,
a deputy registrar who
The nationwide, nonpartisan
worked
a
table in Washington Park.
campaign is sponsored by the
a
lot of the homeless indi"But
National Coalition for the Homeviduals
feel
like they don't have the
less, based in Washington. It has
right
to
vote."
she said.
been held each year since 1992.
Kamas
said
no states bar homeFifty-three cities, including Los
less
people
from
voting, but there
Angeles, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh
is
a
lot
of
misunderstanding
about
and Louisville, .K.y ., were to hold
the
requirements
for
registration.
A
homeless voter registration drives
Thursday. Other participating Ohio common misconception is that you
By SONJA BARISIC
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI Barbara
Thurnquist is 47 years old and
never has voted.
"I really didn ' t think it was
important," said Thumquist, who
is homeless. "I was out there all
day busting my butt, trying to make

have to have a home to vote.
In Ohio , people registering to
vote do not have to list a trnditional
residence, such as a house or apartment, said Maureen Brown,
spokeswoman for Secretary of
State Bob Taft.
''A mission or shelter or even a
park bench will suffice," she said.
Those who registered in Cincinnati were given food such as
brownies or coupons for a free pint
of ice cream. The ftrst 20 to register received a certificate for $35
worth of food donated by St.
John's Social Service Agency.
Ohio law prohibits offering
"something of value" in return for
registering to vote, Brown said.
She dec lined to comment on
whether the registration program
violated the law.
'
Karnas said his group encourages local sponsors of the drive to
give out such incentives.
He did not know exactly how
many homeless people nationwide
registered to vote through the program last year but said the number
was "in the thousands."

'.

. T~KI~G P~!tT- Mary Burke, co-chair of the Greater
Cmc_mnah Coalition ~or the H~meless, registered Robert Norman
outs1de the St. FranciS soup k•tcheo Thursday. Firty-tbree cities
across the country were slated for homeless voter registration
Thursday. (A·P)

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